My He(ART)-Full Life



Tuesday, May 31, 2011

fullness

                                     (roses from the garden, a very old scarf of mine 
                                        from long ago travels and...one amazing book!)
Can I just say that when a friend of mine recommended this book to me years ago...I simply devoured it? Besides the writing being so honest + witty + delicious + funny +...in so many ways...this is my story!!! I spent so much of my twenties with wings on my feet; I had serious wanderlust! Never mind that if an Indian woman isn't married and bearing children by the time she's oh! 20 (!!!), shes' over the hill. I had other ideas. People thought I was being self indulgent, selfish or just... weird. I was completely okay with that:) In between trying to run away from mySELF + finding mySELF + mending my soul +...I lived in an ashram, went on a pilgrimage to India, spent a summer in New Orleans and took all sorts of wrong turns and detours that turned out to be...exactly where I was supposed to be! I am so glad I never married early because I am 100% certain that I would of ended up plain old miserable.
                 (Awakening to the fullness of herSELF, Archival prints available here!!)
Anyways...Tim rented the movie Eat, Pray, Love for me this weekend. I had so wanted to see it last summer but ...just couldn't fit it in with Tara. Usually movies disappoint me after the book-but I must say that I loved it! The only complaint I have about the movie is this. How could Julia Roberts eat all that pasta and pizza and ...those pastries... and still be so skinny??? I gained 10 lbs just reading the book! I'm not kidding either!
Anyways. There is a line at the end of the movie that really resonated with me. It's when the old, 9th generation Balinese medicine man Ketut says to Liz "Sometimes in life, we must be unbalanced in love to be balanced in life". I think that's the same with all aspects of our lives. I wrote a post where I was struggling/striving for balance just a short while ago but now I see that, in life, things are often unbalanced and...that's okay. Its the inner intention and clarity that matters. A person can appear to be  outwardly balanced but...absolutely miserable because they are not living from their core, from their heart. And the opposite can be true as well. It doesn't matter what others think of the lives we are living; that's for us to decide. That Ketut...he's a wise old man:)

Sunday, May 29, 2011

all the good stuff

 
(Sat. morning-Safari Park)
*These past few days just flew right by! I mean...in the blink of an eye!! There is just so much to see and do here-we are so very lucky. We spent all of Saturday morning at the Safari Park and it was amazing. They are very eco-conscious, recycle over 90% of all their water and materials and best of all...they really facilitate breeding and saving animals from extinction. Tara was thrilled to see giraffes, elephants and gibbons. Her fave part was seeing all the babies! The park is huge and we only saw a fraction of it...we definitely will be going back. I was surprised at how breathtakingly beautiful the giraffes were. I hadn't seen one since I was a child...back in S.Africa and I had forgotten their beauty and grace. Tara has been chattering about it ever since-she was thrilled!
*I can't believe how close we live to the beach...we go there every opportunity we get. We walk along the seawall, people/bird/dog watch, build sandcastles, have mini-picnics and dip our toes in the water. Tara is an outdoor girl for sure!
*My absolute best moment of the weekend was watching Tim and Tara dancing up a storm in the kitchen!!It cracked me up + choked me up all at once:)  
*Oh! and I just had to add this pic in! Tara got a new dress that is her absolute fave!!! She wants to wear it all the time...every day...even to bed:) I can't say I blame her...adorable!!
*We had an indoor picnic yesterday evening. We  spread beach towels on the living room floor, lit some candles and watched My Big Fat Greek Wedding-hilarious!!!
* I received a phone call from a friend I hadn't heard from in a while-we have so much catching up to do!
*I hope you all had a fantastic weekend as well...full of love + laughter + fun + all the good stuff!

Friday, May 27, 2011

a few things I'm looking forward to...

*Tara's new art class starts in a couple of weeks. She absolutely loves painting and we are soooo looking forward to it!!
* Memorial Day long weekend. We were going to go out of town but decided that traffic + toddler =  bad idea! But we have lots of other fun stuff planned and really looking forward to lots of family time:)
* I just signed up for a mini retreat June 4 (next Saturday!!)...Inner Gardening and am super duper excited about it!  Art + nature + spirited women =  just what I need!! 
* Father's Day-right around the corner!
* writing in my new gratitude journal
* summer in Ca.!!!!
* learning how to use my new digital SLR. (one of my Mother's Day gift from Tim)
What are a few things you are looking forward to? Maybe ...just around the corner or a few months away?
* P.S. If any of you live in So. Cal and are interested in attending the Inner Gardening retreat, please visit Patty's blog here to find out more!

Wednesday, May 25, 2011

a few lessons I have learned

                                         (Heart Wide Open, archival prints available here)
I watched the very last Oprah show today and...I just can't believe that it's been 25 years. I can't even begin to explain what Oprah means to me, the impact she has had on my life and like gazillions of others...how dearly I will miss her. When her show first came on the air, I was a young teen. We had only recently moved to Canada; I was born and raised until I was 12 years old under apartheid (a whole other post on what that experience was like!). Anyways...watching her show through my teens was an anchor in my very painful  life. Here are just a few lessons I have learned through the years from Oprah:
 * claiming our shame is the first step to releasing and healing ourSELVES. When she so openly talked about her sexual abuse, battle with weight, her painful childhood...she gave us all permission to talk about our pain. That was big, huge for me. I learned early on to speak my truth no matter what.
* gratitude. I keep a gratitude journal because of her and what blessings they have brought! But more importantly, focusing on gratitude has made me realise how rich and blessed I really am.
* feminism is not a dirty word! Here is  a self made woman in every sense of the word and she did it by being herSELF!!!
* she mothered me with her wisdom and encouragement and I hung on for dear life.
*  we "are not defined by our mistakes"
* have an open heart...to life; all of it! The heartbreak, pain, joy, success...the whole shebang!
*I am worthy. She taught me that...yes she did. Having come from  a very dysfunctional and painfully abusive childhood...she was the very first person to ever say that to me.
But I think the most important thing I have learned from her has been this...when we are truly ourSELVES and live from the heart, when we align our intentions with our actions, when we speak our truths and share our stories and lessons...we empower ourSELVES and others. I hope I can pass these lessons down to Tara through my living them out.
When I watched her farewell show today, I was bawling let me tell you. As Tara said ..."Orr-pah. Aw gone!"

Tuesday, May 24, 2011

showing up

                                           (She trusted the journey, she trusted herSELF 
                                                             archival prints available here!)
One of the really difficult lessons I have learned along the way-that I am still learning -is this. Sometimes I just have to show up and do my best. After a looooong day with Tara (we get up at about 6 a.m), the last thing I want to do when I get her off to sleep at night (8-8:30 p.m.) is go into my studio. But I show up. Sometimes I do backgrounds or work on paintings in various stages. Sometimes I read, write or just piddle around. Whether it's for a half hour or 4 hours.It's the same here on my blog. I don't always know what I am going to write about. Sometimes I feel that I have nothing important to say or share. Sometimes I wonder why I blog at all.  If anyone is reading this or whether my words make any sense. But still...I show up
                                                    (my studio table...a few minutes ago)
 I think it's the same with life...every single aspect of it.  When I question my abilities as a mother/artist//wife....I just show up...with all of my insecurities and baggage and pain and vulnerabilities. With all of my joy and questions and sass and humor. With all of my anger and creativity and heart and spirit. Mistakes and mayhem... I just show up and do my best.
                                                               (Tara girl painting) 
 I really hope I can instill that in Tara. that winning is not as important as trying. That doing your best and giving your all is...winning. That the journey -while it may not take us where we want to go-takes us exactly where we need to go. That if we trust in ourSELVES, and trust in our journey...life carries us to places we can't even imagine. Places within ourSELVES that are... real.  That's where life lies...this is where our journey takes us. 

Sunday, May 22, 2011

what is good for us

                                                      (work in progress-huge painting!)
"...From the sky, from the earth, from a scrap of paper, from a passing shape...we must pick out what is good for us where we can find it."   -Picasso
I don't know about you, but as I get older, I know what is good for me. I mean...really good for me...my heart and soul, my spirit, my physical being and mind and heart...my whole being. When I was younger...oh! it was a different story altogether. The choices I made, the meanderings and sidesteps, mazes and poor choices. Of course now I can see how every single piece has brought me to this place but...boy! did I have to go the long way around!!!??? Now I know that what is good for me right now, may change tomorrow. That life is constantly in flux...and so are we. A few things that are oh! so so good for me right now...
 * painting, creating, working with my hands. After a month of flus and colds and resting...it feels so deliciously good to paint again.
*my marriage. To think that I spent most of my life running away from commitment only to find out that...I love marriage! Of course I had to be the right person and meet the right person but...I love all the small moments of ordinary-ness, the shared memories and heart, the partnership and building dreams together...the trusting of  ourSELVES to be completely who we are.
                                                      (sassy girl Tara in our backyard)
* motherhood. watching my Tara grow and bloom and ...just loving her to pieces. All these small moments of caring for her...reading to her, preparing her fave. foods, giggling and being silly and ...setting boundaries and listening to her say fantastic new words every day. Being a witness to this... miracle.
*crocheting and sewing. Just love all the fabrics out there now...lush, bold prints just begging to be turned into pillows or tablecloths or...
                                                          (morning walks at the lake)  
*immersing ourSELVES in nature over here. Going to the beach as much as possible, watching the birds and dogs and ducks...our morning walks around the lake. And I am loving the luxury of walking out the back door and cutting bouquets of roses anytime I want. And oh! There's a gorgeous peach tree in our backyard!!
* community-of kindred spirits, artists, writers, sculptors, bloggers...wise and craft mammas, nature-lovers, quilters...Amazing, wonderfully fire-hearted women everywhere! Just loving it!
*poetry...lush and lusty...gorgeous words dripping with life. I am reading lots of poetry to Tara now...Sonia Sanchez, Maya Angelou, Mary Oliver and of course...Dr. Suess!!
what are some of the things that are good for you right now? I would love it if you shared.

Wednesday, May 18, 2011

Interview with Lis- mamma, yogini, creative soul-Part I

                                       (Lis and her beautiful daughter...aka "cowgirl")
As part of my series of interviews with amazing, over the top, inspiring women...I am so pleased to post this interview with Lis! When I first got to know Lis...what struck me was her extraordinarily huge heart, her capacity to extend grace and love to all she met, her amazing mothering skills as well as her creativity. I am sure once you get to know her a little more...you will be touched by her  as well. She so willingly shares her journey with authenticity, bravery and heart.
I love the way you infuse creativity into every aspect of Cowgirls' life!! I get so many ideas from you Lis! You encourage your daughter to paint, write books (!!!), take photos...can you share a few practical tips on how we can do the same? Do you expose your daughter to certain interests or do you let her take the lead?
This journey to recover my creative self began with my daughter.  The very first online course I ever took – Mermaid Warrior Art Camp with McCabe Russell -  was geared towards children or “the course you wish you had when you were a kid.”  McCabe is great.  She really encourages people to believe we don’t have to dumb art-making down for kids.  Our very first project was to create  art journals and Cowgirl’s journal is almost full!  Cowgirl was 4 at the time and her art experience was limited to crayons and finger paints.  It has been really fun to introduce her to new materials – she loves watercolor paints and has used up two of my somewhat expensive watercolor sets!  I try to show her how to use the materials and then I do my best to step out of the way.  As a kid, I remember being frustrated because I hadn’t been taught any technique.  So I try to help her understand how certain materials may work and show her how to handle different tools.  I then let her have at it, but I may step in to suggest other ways of working if she seems to be getting frustrated.  I guess I set things up, suggest ideas or projects and then let her do what she wants.  She always surprises me.  She has a great sense of color and a vivid imagination, so it is fun to see how she interprets things.

As a kid I was always told I was “artistic” and talented which one would think is being supportive, but it had the opposite effect upon me.  I believed being talented meant things should come easily. But because I had to work hard at art, well, then I must not really be that good at it.  Fear and doubt crippled me.  So I am very careful with Cowgirl to ask her if she is enjoying herself.  I praise her on how hard she worked on her art and how she seems to really like making the piece rather than saying how good it is or how creative she must be.  For us, making art is a time to be together talking and sharing and we focus upon that experience.  She will often say “I really like making art with you” and I love hearing that!  We also talk about how there is no right or wrong way to do art (she heard this on one of McCabe’s videos) and I think it really comforts her to know she can do what she enjoys and there is no judgment involved.
I love your photography and how it has evolved since I have been reading your blog. You capture depth and mood so well; when I see your photos, I actually feel them! Can you give us beginner photographers any tips on how to capture a moment, an emotion...a mood?
Photography is my first love, so thank you for that lovely compliment!  I am a lover of detail, so I am always stepping in closer and closer to see what is perhaps hidden or less visible.  I think every photography teacher must say, before snapping the shot, take one step closer.  Fill the frame of viewfinder.  Don’t be afraid to crop something.  I studied art history and I recently realized my photographs are informed by painters like Degas who were influenced by photography!  To convey a sense of a moment captured, you don’t balance everything symmetrically; you cut something off to convey the sense of having a fleeting glimpse of a moment, an action or event. 
The only other tip is shoot with your heart.  What is happening that you want to remember or preserve?  Where is the emotional center to the scene?  The drop of ice cream rolling down your daughter’s chin?  The way your dog rests one paw against the other?  A single flower against the green of the lawn?  If I’m not moving around a lot – squatting, bending, flipping my camera up and down then I am not looking actively enough and probably am taking dull pictures.  Oh, my favorite tip – you can turn your camera and frame the shot vertically!  I probably do it too much, but I seem to prefer the look of a vertical or portrait framing versus the horizontal or landscape orientation.  

I understand you are a yogini. How does your spirituality translate or affect your creative life?
I am finding there is little difference between my yoga practice and my creativity.  Both are about dropping into flow, opening to intuition, and cultivating presence and self-awareness without judgment.  Both are about discovering the truth that who I am is greater than my fears, doubts, limited beliefs and understanding.  Both mentor me in the experience of being a part of something vast and unending.  When I teach yoga, I allow the teachings to flow through me and from that experience I’ve come to realize that I do not possess creativity or talent, it is simply a part of me – or I am a part of it perhaps?   However it works,  I open to it and allow it to flow.  Or not.  There are those days too.
 I find myself drawing upon the teachings of yoga to support me in my creative life.  The obstacles that Patanjali lays out in the Yoga Sutras can be applied to the spiritual as well as the creative journey: mental laziness, doubt, lack of enthusiasm, loss of ground gained – all of these will arise to challenge us.  Call me crazy, but I take comfort in knowing this!  If I am having a rough day, I think “ah yes, this is to be expected” and somehow that helps me keep things in perspective.  I know it is just something to be gotten through. 
 Essential in both areas is nonattachment to the outcome of my actions – what is known as Karma Yoga.  I have to show up, do my share, put in the effort and then accept whatever happens as a gift or an opportunity to learn or grow.  So whatever I am doing, I try my best not to focus so much upon the end result but be present for the process.  What am I learning?  Often my biggest messes have given me the greatest insights and lessons.  The seemingly random bird added to a painting turns out to be a reminder to look for joy and magic in every situation.  I am constantly blown away by what creeps in when my controlling mind is temporarily on sabbatical!

You have become very involved in Half the Sky Foundation. I love to see how one ordinary extraordinary woman can lift...half the sky!! What would you like us to know about the situation against girl children in China?
I’m not as up-to-date on the situation in China as I was when we were going through the process to adopt our daughter and that was over 6 years ago.  In terms of the welfare centers, a lot has changed since then. Most of the children currently available for international adoption are special needs or older children,  including teenagers.  Half the Sky’s programs have expanded to include these older children whose likelihood of becoming adopted is very slim.  So Half the Sky’s educational and training programs provides these kids – girls and boys  who have no other resources or support -  a chance at a brighter future.  It is humbling to read the newsletter these kids produce as part of their training.  Their outlook is amazing – very practical, but also hopeful.  They have been given a huge gift: the belief that they can make a difference in their world.   They are the generation that will instigate change and it is important to let them know we all care. 
Lis, thank you so much for granting me this interview. I have learned so much from your answers and...I am totally inspired to become more and more of who I am (just like you are!)
*all photos used in this post courtesy of Lis

Tuesday, May 17, 2011

link love


It's been rainy over here and Tara and I have been down with our second bout of the flu in about 3 weeks! Sniffles and sore throats and...general yuckiness!! So it's been hot soup, reading, napping  and cuddling on the couch quite a bit! A few things I have been enjoying lately and want to share with you...
* this blog over here (love her paintings and stories)
* this post by Jen Lemen (How to be Happy -Part II) is sooooo true...every morsel of it! I printed it up and stuck it up where I can read it every single day.
*love this blog full of inspiring goodness + her photography 
*am absolutely going to buy her book when it comes out!
* love this current post by Jen Lee called Some Seasons are for Living  (you can also read my interview with her here)
Hope you enjoy the links...hopefully we will be feeling much better over here soon!
Oh! and thank you to all of you for leaving so many insightful, supportive comments re. my last post. It helps put things into perspective when I get so unbalanced about...well, being balanced!!

Sunday, May 15, 2011

striving for balance

I am always striving for balance...like so many of us.  I read up on how other women (with far busier schedules than mine!) do it. I try out different things but...boy! sometimes it just gets all scrambled up. See...here's the thing...my being is equal parts Eastern philosophy (no time but the present, time doesn't really exist, things will happen when they do...) and the other part is over scheduling, to-do lists, 7 Habits...that sort of thing. I go from work, work, work, do, do, do to...burnout where I am forced to slooooow down and focus on the present. Is it just me, or do you all face that too? So I find that I am always striving for some sort of balance. Maybe part of the problem is I need to stop striving so much? I have started  a regular (okay...a semi-regular!!) meditation practice. Just being in the moment...present...without fear, inadequacy, judgement. A place where I can think anything without attachment...and just watch my thoughts.  I don't know how it's working out so far...I mean...10 mins. of meditation to slow me down and then a cup of coffee to get me going!! See what I mean?

Friday, May 13, 2011

our day in pics

"I don't know exactly what a prayer is.
I do know how to pay attention, how to fall down
into the grass, how to kneel down in the grass,
how to be idle and blessed, how to stroll through the fields,
which is what I have been doing all day.
Tell me, what else should I have done?
Doesn't everything die at last, and too soon?
Tell me, what is it you plan to do
with your one wild and precious life?"         
-Mary Oliver


 *on our morning walk...it really is this green over here! 

*at the park. Tara loves climbing! 

*string painting in her art class...
I had a gazillion and one things to do today-but I woke up and decided to "stroll through the fields" with my Tara... gaze at the sky, absorb her fleeting baby-ness and just be.

Monday, May 9, 2011

motherhood has many voices

                                                         (baby Tara at 6 months old)
I became a mother pretty late in life; I turned 40 and delivered Tara all in the same month! For me, motherhood has been an empowering journey and a gift; unequaled. When I gave birth to Tara, I also (unknowingly at the time) birthed mySELF. I have never known such an unconditional love...it both nourished and depleted me. I never knew such moments of utter helplessness... of strength and fragility all combined. Of vulnerability and invincibility. Some days I knew exactly what I was doing and then...everything changes and I am completely in the dark. The first year of motherhood  was an extremely intense time...both precious and precarious. Tim was away quite a bit (work related) and with no family or other support...I had to reach deep within mySELF and find those reserves of steel and knowledge that we all have. That first year was especially difficult because I had not yet learned to trust my own voice, my intuition and mothering instincts.
My 2nd year of motherhood was much easier in so many ways. It was a paring down of all the unnecessary elements in our lives. As much as possible...I now asked myself this one question...is this person, event, place, memory, situation, relationship, thing...going to enable me to be a better mom to Tara or not. I focused more and more on being present.
 Being kind became much more important than knowing the answers and being "right". For me, motherhood continues to be a journey of the most magical kind. But this is my story; this is my voice.
There are many different voices and stories of motherhood and mothering. For so many many women around the world...motherhood presents far greater challenges and dangers. For so many women (and girls) motherhood is not even a choice they make but something that is forced upon them. They don't have adequate medical care, nutrition, birth control or resources.
                                                 (Image by Stephanie Sinclair/VII Network)
Here are a few stats:
*Worldwide, about one woman dies every minute in childbirth! Most of these deaths are preventable.
* Eight million children worldwide die before their fifth birthday. That is 22,000 a day, and most of these deaths are preventable as well. The worst child mortality rates exist in India, China, Nigeria, Pakistan, and the Democratic Republic of the Congo.
 *In so many countries, millions of young girls (an estimated 60 million!!) are forced into arranged marriages and bear children before they are physically ready to do so. This puts mothers and babies at risk for everything from HIV to poverty to domestic abuse to death.
  (I am not sure where I got this pic from...but she is a child marrying a grown man!!!)
* In countries like India, women who give birth to girls are at risk for being murdered along with their babies.
I almost didn't write this post because...well, I don't want to put  a damper on all the rosy glow of Mother's Day. But I think it's important to acknowledge that mothering is not an empowering choice for many women. For so many women, it is not a choice at all.
To learn more...
*Every Mother Counts
*International Center for Research on Women
* V Day-help stop violence against girls and women
I would love to hear your comments!

Sunday, May 8, 2011

fantastic Mother's day !

                                            (this afternoon-mommy and Princess Tara)
I had such an amazing Mother's Day weekend! I know it's supposed to be all about mommy but it was still...all about Tara! And I don't mind  a bit! Not one little bit! Since I came to motherhood late in life (age 40!!)...I am ever so grateful to have this tiny person in our lives. I am so filled with the abundance of being a mother ...it's all still an absolute thrill to me!
                                       (delicious lamb kabobs, rice pilaf, greek salad)
Today we went hiking and to the park. Then I opened some amazing gifts + cards + hugs + smooches.
And this evening we went to a cosy Mediterranean restaurant overlooking the beach. We had humus, succulent lamb kabobs, Greek salad and  delicious lemon/chicken soup. And there was  a belly dancer!!! She was gorgeous and...very sparkly! Tara just loved her and was even coaxed into dancing with her!!
                                                               (isn't she gorgeous???)
* thanks to all of you for stopping by my blog to wish me a Happy Mother's day! I just want to say how very much it means to me.
this week...all my posts are going to be motherhood related!
* some of the challenges and dangers that mothers face around the world
* I have an amazing interview with Lis; mother, yogini, creative soul
* an open letter to Tara
* a few tips/tricks I have learned about balancing motherhood +...everything else. Balance...uh what balance??
and more! So please stop back!

Friday, May 6, 2011

happy Mother's Day!

(my sweet Tara)
"One bird flying through the clouds is enough. Your sweet face at the door of the house is enough."
                                                                                                                                      R. Bly
I received this gorgeous poem in the mail today with a handmade Mother's Day card (thanks so much Jane!!).  And it's just perfect to describe how I feel about my family, my Tara, my marriage, my life right now. It is enough. I am thankful and full of gratitude.
                                                       (roses from the garden...for you)
happy Mother's Day!

Wednesday, May 4, 2011

welcome to my studio!

Here are a few random pics of my studio. I have been meaning to take some proper pics for a studio tour...but just haven't got around to it:) When I still lived in Canada (before I married) I had converted my entire living room into my art studio! I had tons of space because...the whole place was art-centered. In Va. , I shared my studio with the guest bedroom. Tim had put some custom shelving up for me...but it was still a tight squeeze. Now I finally have an entire room to myself! Bliss!)

* these are the Indian patchwork curtains I made. They are all hodge-podge, let me tell you! But...I love them! When the light pours through them, they are just gorgeous! My computer, printer, scanner etc are all to the right of the pic...

 * I bought a couple of these white cubed storage shelves from..Ikea or Home Depot (can't remember where!). But they are fantastic! They hold so much, are sturdy, durable and look great.

*I find that storage is key...to fitting everything, finding things when you need them and to create an aesthetically pleasing environment. Of course, once I start creating , everything turns into huge mess and...things are never as neat as you see in these pics:)

* I use tons of kitchen stuff to hold my art supplies because they are functional, durable and pretty. I use cups, jugs, bowls, glasses, utensil caddies...whatever catches my eye.

* I always try to have some fresh flowers whether it's a small bunch I picked from the garden or a bouquet of roses! And...isn't the light  just fantastic over here?!

 * cardboard storage boxes are perfect to store...just about anything!I picked mine up at Walmart and Michaels.
Here are a few details...

* collections of fabric, china, yarn, alphabets...

* detail of my inspiration board

*paintings in progress...
This is my temporary studio; we are only going to be here for...the next 8 months or so...Now in my dreams, I have hardwood floors, tons of windows, a fireplace (!!) , a wall of bookshelves..sigh...
Thanks for looking!

Sunday, May 1, 2011

making room for creativity

"You can't use up creativity. The more you use, the more you have." -Maya Angelou

                                                      
My journey as an artist and full time creative being didn't really begin until I turned 30! Until then,I didn't even consider mySELF to be creative! Sure...I went through bursts of creativity and always read about other artists, visited museums and delved into different creative endeavors but...it wasn't until I made room in my life to live creatively that everything changed. Here are a few things I have learned along the way:
1. don't pay attention to what other people think/say. Before I married Tim, I lived in a very spartan one bedroom apartment. I had turned my whole living room into my art studio. I didn't have any fancy furniture; a bed, a table and  2 chairs...and no T.V.!! But I had tons of art, magnificent drawings, books, bouquets of roses, photographs, music...all the things that filled me up and fed me.

2. take care of yourSELF...physically, emotionally, mentally and spiritually. I think the stereotype of the tortured artist is...well, overrated! Yes, we can channel our pain and life experiences to create but...I find that when I have a healthy lifestyle, I have more energy to think, write, paint...
3. I write everything down-all my ideas for paintings, DIY projects, color schemes for Tara's nursery...everything!
4. creating isn't only about painting or writing or...it infuses all aspects of our lives. It's how we create our space at home, it's thinking of different ways to do things, it's re-purposing what we have...it's writing, photography, baking and sewing. It's raising a child well and sitting under a full fat moon listening to music. It's life.
 5. the creative journey is no different than our life journey...they are one and the same. There are ups and downs and twists and turns and unexpected detours.
6. carve out a physical space for creativity...whether it's a journal or sketchbook, a corner of the kitchen or  a whole room.
7. don't be afraid of failure...it is one of our greatest teachers.
8. don't let fear stop you. Aren't we all afraid of  a gazillion things? But when we focus on small steps...we start to think creatively and the more we accomplish, the more creative we become!

*so many, many times I hear people say " I'm just not creative"...but we all are...if we just give ourSELVES the time and space and heart.