Category: Reading Nook

Create a Studio Moment:
A Practice in Intentional Learning

Sparkler,Create a Moment.

Don’t you get tired of life lessons?

I know I do!

But welcome or not, they keep showing up again and again, most often when we steadfastly resist the message! For example, I still seem to believe I can do it all no matter how often my body tells me differently – but I’m learning! (It’s taken years, but I’m learning.)

And sometimes, even though you are an open-hearted person devoted to inner growth, don’t you get steamed when someone says to you, “At least it’s an opportunity for learning. There must be a lesson in here.” Gah!!!

But there is. There always is.

Lessons are everywhere. We can learn from the patterns of our relationships, from the collection of clothes in our closet, from what’s used and unused in our home.

In fact, if you’re particularly sensitive, you can get overwhelmed by the sheer volume of lessons available. “What can I learn about waking up mindfully? How can I create a routine that supports a good day? What’s the opportunity in negotiating who gets into the bathroom first? Which outfit best expresses the me I am becoming?” All of this and you haven’t even gotten out of bed!

When learning is important and lessons are everywhere, how can we become more intentional in our development? How can we relax and live our lives without fear of losing the learning or worry that lessons will sneak up on us?

Create Studio Moments

Studio moments are consciously chosen opportunities for learning.  They’re like drawing a circle around a certain situation or aspect of your life and actively deciding, “I’m going to work with this.”

Imagine a scientist. There are worlds upon worlds to discover and explore. The scientific mind has the whole universe and beyond to consider, not to mention the entire microscopic world! Imagine the overwhelm! So what does a scientist do? S/he chooses a point of study, defines the experiment and uses that as a framework for learning.

We creative spirits can do the same. Here’s how:

Choose the Moment and Name It

The moment can be an action,  a time or something tangible. It can be an interaction, situation or circumstance. It can be something that has happened or something that you are about to step into.

Choosing your outfit can become a studio moment. Tidying your bedroom can become a studio moment. Calling customer service can become a studio moment. Anything you choose to focus on and learn from can become a studio moment. The important part is to choose.

Choose something that doesn’t feel overwhelming to explore. The scale should match the time and attention that you want to devote to this moment. Play with proportions until it feels both interesting and doable.

Once you choose a moment to work with, the next step is to give it a name. Naming draws a circle around it, allowing you to focus your energy on what you are going to explore. The name can be very direct like “My Desktop” or it can be evocative like “Discovering Myself on My Desk.”

Ask the Moment, “What is here for me to learn?”

Now that you’ve created a circle around the moment, let your awareness open up to what is inside. What clues and messages are in this Studio Moment? What is here to learn?

My Studio Moment: Working with “Discovering Myself on My Desk”

I look over and see a collection of earrings, rings, necklaces I’ve worn throughout the week. They’re lying beside a pile of stones that I keep on my desk to inspire me. I am both astonished and not surprised at all to see that their colour stories are the same. I see that whatever the medium, I choose whites/clears, pinks, blues, silver and sparkle. I see the clear quartz and I think about how I have always been drawn to clear objects. That’s reinforced by the crystal globe full of bubbles that sits right behind the stones.

I remember the glass dining room table we had growing and how I chose it – and the time I broke it by leaning on it to get up. There’s a clear glass vase I use for markers, ones I particularly like. I think about how my Auntie Laima gave me two whole sets of them and I feel so blessed. There’s my @starshyne mug from a wonderful client, the clock I gave myself when I passed coaching certification, my yearly vision cards and a statue of elephants that a dear friend graced me with. I’m in tears now seeing how this little corner of my desk is a portrait of me. It is a tangible acknowledgement of the life I have poured my heart into creating. This Studio Moment reflects back to me myself, creativity, coaching, community and love.

I think that’s going to help me keep my desk tidy!

What will I create from this moment?

Whatever the learning in your studio moment, how is it going to infuse your heart and your life? Now that you know, what will you do?

For me, though I was kind of joking about tidying, I also wasn’t. That Studio Moment revealed my desk as a kind of altar. It’s a sacred space that reflects my life and intention and I’m going to treat it that way. Because I feel so much love and beauty there, I’m also going to take some pictures. And get a new battery for my clock! I’m reminded too that on my list is a letter and package to my friend of the elephants. It’s well past time.

Even as I shift gears from discovery to considering what I’m going to create in my life based on what I’ve learned, I can feel the relaxation in my body. This Studio Moment has helped to guide me to what’s next. This learning is meant to be applied.

Experience has taught me that that I could have received as powerful and useful a lesson if I’d looked in my drawer or under my sink, if I’d chosen my subway ride or my run, a conversation with a cab driver or a trip to the art store.

Lessons are everywhere. When we open up to a moment, there is much we can learn.

Create a Studio Moment

 

Discover Your Magic Words

JRS Words2

Words are powerful and the words we use to describe ourselves and the work we do matters.

Our words become incantations, adding layer upon layer of energy and meaning to our lives, to our world and to ourselves.

Let’s be intentional in our magic-making.

First, let’s discover the mojo that is already here, the energy that’s been invested and held. You can do this exercise for your self or for the work that you do in the world (and by this I mean your heart work, whether you’re being paid for it or not).

 Gathering

On a scrap piece of paper, give yourself some time to answer the following:

  • What words do you currently use to describe yourself/your work?
  • What words do others use to describe you/your work?

Feel free to do some research. Go back and look at emails, comments, letters, journals, even performance reviews. Anywhere you get feedback is a resource.

 Clearing

Looking at what you’ve gathered, are there words that take you off course? There may be some that have been with you a long time that no longer fit. There may be words that spring leaks in your energy or poke holes in your dreams. Mark the ones that you know you’d like to cast aside.

Take a special look at words that seem neutral. These “easy to ignore” words serve as filler in your spells and dilute your magic. Mark them to go.

Look for any that may be fool’s gold. These are the words that are shiny but have no resonance for you. As pretty as they are, when you hold them in your hands it’s clear: no mojo. Let them go.

To clear these words and their energy, marry intention with action. You can cross your marked words out with enthusiasm. Obliterate them completely with a Sharpie. You can cut them out of the page and recycle the pieces. You can rewrite them on one sheet and set them safely on fire. Choose your method of clearing and release.

Creating

What you are left with are words of potency. Notice the different kinds of energy they hold. There may be words that sparkle and words that whisper. There may be words that make you laugh and words that open your heart. Each word holds its own magic and in your unique combination, they hold they magic of you.

The words you have now are just the beginning. They have set the tone of the landscape as it is today (as did the the ones you’ve left behind). Now is your opportunity to add some new ingredients to the mix, to begin creating with the language of your dreams.

This week…

  • Look at your own writing (e.g. your journal, your blog, your emails) and see what magic words you find yourself using again and again and now want to consciously claim.
  • Listen for words that catch your heart and your ear. They can come from anywhere: songs, blogs, books, conversations.
  • Write down words that you would love for people to use to describe you/your work.

When you feel like you have a beautiful collection of words, words that make you perk up and beam, let yourself claim them by creating with them.

Create an art journal page that’s filled with your magic words. Paint each one on a rock until you have a gorgeous pile. Ink your words on a scroll and place it by your pillow. Use your words in a poem or a letter to yourself. Use them on your blog, on your sales page, in your pitch.

Say the magic words.

Let these words fill your life. Let them work their magic.

More and more let the words of your dreams become the language of you. This is their magic – and yours.

As I refine my own magic words, I’d love to hear what brought you to the studio. What were you looking for and what made you step in? Email me. I’ll be listening.

How Long Does It Take to Make a Dream to Come True?

Dahlia Unfolds #goodmorninggarden

For most of my life, I have felt this great sense of urgency, hurry and drive. I’ve had this feeling that if I don’t move faster, if I don’t make things happen, I’m going to miss out. And I hate missing out.

But recently It occurred to me that perhaps the opposite is also true: if I don’t slow down, I’m going to miss out. (And I hate missing out)

My sense is that both of these thoughts hold truth in them. Life likes to be paradoxical like that.

It wasn’t a particular moment or event that started this change in my perspective. In fact, it’s been a bit wild sitting back and watching my view change before my eyes. It’s almost like I have been traveling on a slow-moving ocean liner, wishing it would get going, get going, get going, and when I finally stopped to look I noticed that we were moving and the view was changing. Maybe from here, things are different. Maybe this is the magic of getting older.

I started to notice the impact of this change when I was watching The Voice. It’s a show on which singers compete to be mentored by some of the greats in the industry in the hopes of going on not only to win the show’s competition but also to jump start their careers. It’s a show about making your dreams come true.

As the singers share their personal stories, trends emerge. One of those themes, particularly with younger artists, is that they’ve given themselves a block of time to make their music career happen, often one year. If they don’t make it in one year, they’ll go back to college, their hometown, their day job. They have one year to make their dream come true.

When I was younger that made absolute sense. Many people take a year out of high school or after college or university to test the waters and try things out. And in some ways a year is a long time. It’s a long time to sustain yourself while you’re trying something risky. It’s a long time for your parents or your partner or your kids to be patient while you throw yourself into your dream. It’s a long time to wonder and hope and see if something, anything, is going to happen.

On the other hand, from where I’m sitting now, I look back on all that I’ve done, all that I’ve created or built or experienced, I look at my own dreams come true and I see that they all took time. Sometimes a lot of time. Almost always more time than I expected and certainly more time than I would have liked. It took me a year to learn the basics of coaching, longer to become good at it. It took me more than a year to build my business to the point where I could leave my day job. Heck, It took me more than a year to plan and save and get to Paris for our 10th wedding anniversary!

From here my heart breaks to think of those singers on The Voice who say that if they don’t make it after one year, they’re giving up. One year of hard work and then, “That’s it. I’m done with music.”

Never be done with music.

Sure, after one year things might have to change. There may be no more rent-free living with your parents. You may have to get a part-time job to continue. You may have to cut back on the 7-day a week devotion because it’s exhausting. Things may have to change but that doesn’t mean it’s time to give up.

We can’t manage how long our dreams take to happen or even whether they’ll happen at all. We can only manage the time and energy that we devote to them. You may be willing to give one year to your dream but that doesn’t mean your dream takes one year to grow.

When one young singer was sent home from The Voice, she left the stage in tears. Gwen Stefani, who is one of the judges, told her not to give up. She said, “Do you know how many years I was in a band before I was on the radio? Nine!!” Mega star Gwen Stefani spent nine years playing before she was on the radio!!

I’m not saying that one year isn’t a powerful time to give yourself over to your dream. I’m saying this.

If after one year, you have fallen in love, don’t give up. It takes time for things to grow.

I’m also saying don’t get attached to one particular form of dream delivery. That singer (and many others) may not win The Voice but there are a myriad of other ways for her aspirations to be fulfilled, many more than she’s even dreamed of.

That’s true for you and me too.

When one incarnation of your dream doesn’t fall into place, don’t give up. When on year hasn’t seen everything fall perfectly into place, don’t give up.

Let your love for what you love guide your way. Let it keep you on your path of dream development and discovery. Be smart and practical about building foundations but don’t think that means having to give up your dreams and ideals. The marriage of the practical and the aspirational is what creative living is all about.

The Joy of Colour (ing)

The Joy of Colouring

According to a recent article in the Huffington Post, colouring isn’t just for kids. It’s also a great stress reliever for adults.

I’ve experienced this personally. On my recent trip to Holland I discovered how powerfully colouring could help me cope with my fear of flying.* I was amazed to experience my body settling and my mind relaxing through the simple act of adding colour to a page.

Time flies when we colour.

Remember the hours of rapt attention you spent with your crayons as a kid? Maybe you remember watching your kids do the same. Or your grandkids. Maybe they’re colouring now. Are you?

Why did we leave colouring behind?

Where did we get the idea it was just for kids?

For such a simple act, colouring sure has a lot of “rules” associated with it. Colouring must be done within the lines. But cool kids colour outside the lines. Giving colouring books to children is bad because they lose their imagination. Drawing a shape and then colouring it in is for children. It isn’t how real artists draw.

And that’s on top of all of the other art rules we have (e.g. what we create has to be good, what we create has to be useful, what we create has to be sell-able…)

What if we just let colouring be colouring?

A big part of the joy of colouring is the kinesthetic experience. It’s in moving your body and watching something happen. It’s in seeing our impact. It’s in the repetition, the focused release of energy. It is the act itself. The practice.

Re-experience the joy of colouring.

Grab some markers or crayons or coloured pencils and put some colour on the page. Don’t know where to start? Draw a triangle and colour it in. Draw a circle and colour it in. Draw a whole page of circles and colour them in. Grab a flyer and colour in all of the holes in all of the O’s. Tear off a previous month of your calendar and colour each day’s square.

Have fun. Keep it light. Who knows? Maybe colouring will become one of your favourite creative pastimes (again!)

Some Colouring Resources

These days there are some wonderful colouring books to explore, like Secret Garden: An Inky Treasure Hunt and Colouring Book or the Just Add Color series.

Mandalas are also a great way to enjoy colouring. Here’s how I got started with them.

* Thank you again, John, for the suggestion.

The Joy of Colouring Journal

Learning to Sew: Braving the Fabric Store

Fabric Store

I find it incredibly odd and perfectly true that stores can be intimidating. An invisible barrier often exists between the newcomer and the world within, especially with stores that represent something aspirational and/or that cater to a special interest that stirs our hearts but in which we lack knowledge and expertise. For a newbie, stepping into an art store, a music store or a yarn store, for example,  is like treading on foreign soil on a hero’s quest, not knowing the lay of the land or speaking the language. It’s easy to feel lost and overwhelmed.

That’s how I felt about going to a fabric store.

I’ve recently decided to open the door to sewing and my first mission was to choose a pattern and buy some fabric.  Though I spent ages searching and exploring online (the perfect beginning when something feels intimidating), I knew that at some point I had to actually go into a store! Scary! So here’s my top tip for finding the courage to cross the border into the unknown: bring an adventure buddy! I enlisted my sister Shannon, who has studied fashion and knows a thing or two about fabrics!

We decided to go to the closest store, nothing high-end or special, just the most straightforward nearby spot we could find. It ended up being that perfect level of “generally we ignore you and let you do your own thing but you can bother us when you need something.” Perfect.

First: Picking a Pattern

From the time the idea of sewing came to me, I knew I wanted a simple little tunic dress, something I’d wear with tights, something creative and comfortable, something easy to make and easy to wear. This is what I found: McCall’s Fashion Star Pattern 6553. I’m taking the pink dot on the package that says “Easy” at its word! We shall see.

Next: Choosing Fabric

With so many choices it seemed to me that one of the joys of sewing is making something tailored to your own taste (and eventually to your own body). This was strongly reinforced when I Googled people’s finished results with this particular pattern. Have a look. What a range! I especially like this one.

Immediately I was taken with how all of these people had created something that was both exactly the same and completely different. They all began with the same pattern and ended up with something unique and personal. This is one of my very favourite things about creativity – that dance of form and freedom, of function and expression, of earth and fire.

In this aspect, sewing reminded me of the theatre, something I do know and love. Different players perform the same play and it will always always be different. At its core, Hamlet will always be Hamlet, but it will also be alive with the energy, the thoughts, the creativity, the vision of a particular group of people in a particular place at a particular time. As an actor and a director, I know what it is like to ground myself first in a script, letting it guide me and also inspire my own imagination.

Maybe that would help me with sewing too: to start with finding ground in its creative constraints.

Creative Constraints

Fabric Type: One constraint in sewing is that each pattern is best made within a range of particular fabrics, mostly because of how they flow and sew.  My pattern outlined the types of fabrics I should be choosing from. If I hadn’t been with Shannon, this would have been a time to ask for help because even with the descriptions of “Double Knits, Cotton Knits, Gabardine, Suiting Fabrics” I wouldn’t have been sure what to look for. Note: Lesson Learned. On the outside of the pattern there was no indication of the width of fabric I needed in order to have room to place my pattern pieces. This resulted in me not having enough. This is another detail that would be great to confirm at the store.

Price: Another constraint when it comes to choosing fabric is price. To stay within your budget, be sure to check your pattern for how much fabric you need and then do the math as you look at your options. It was quickly clear to me that sewing wasn’t going to be about saving money.

Availability: Once I narrowed down my fabric options by type and price, I chose from what was there. I knew that this time around I wasn’t going to visit dozens of fabric stores or do massive online searches. This was my first project and I had a timeline for starting so I would be working with what was available, here and now.

Creative Freedom & Inspiration

Once the constraints were handled, it was time to have fun and get inspired! Shannon and I had a great time looking at options. The colours, the textures, the patterns – oh my! Right away I could see how a trip to the fabric store could become an artist’s date. Everywhere you looked there were fascinating design choices, colour stories and themes!

I found myself gravitating immediately and repeatedly to a gorgeous floral in dynamic contrasting tones of red and green! It was a major divergence from my favoured greys, whites and blacks and my love of monochromatic colour stories with blues, pinks and purples. I tend to live on one side of the colour wheel and this wasn’t it!

Lesson Learned Note: From years of clothes shopping, including at all sorts of vintage and secondhand shops,  I’ve learned it’s important to pay attention not only to what pleases your eye but also to what you love to wear. There are many gorgeous colours you’ll find on my painting palette that you won’t find in my closet!

Having said that, I choose the red and green. Being unattached to the result of this very first project allowed me the freedom to be playful. I’ll be pleased if this dress simply comes together. I’ll be delighted if it fits. I’ll be over the moon if I can wear it even for one filming of stART or the Behind the Scenes! And then, if I feel like I enjoyed myself, if I feel like this is something I’m interested in and that this is a dress that I’d really like, I’ll go buy some tweedy charcoal grey, something that feels right at home in my wardrobe. And maybe by then, I’ll also be feeling more at home at the fabric store.

Jamie's First Fabric

Gratitude Rituals

Thanksgiving

Today is Thanksgiving in Canada. It is a great reminder to celebrate abundance in all its forms and to take some time for gratitude and acknowledgement too. Despite those each being polysyllabic words, you can do this by inviting a simple and easy practice into your day.

Take a moment to answer these 3 easy questions.

  • What is something you’re grateful for?
  • What is something you’d like to acknowledge yourself for?
  • What abundance would you like to celebrate?

What if you kept a little note of your answers for a month? Imagine! You’d end up with 30 celebrations, 30 gratitudes and 30 acknowledgements! If you’re in the US, what if you answered these questions each day until your Thanksgiving? How richly might this practice infuse that special day?

Let’s start with today. Here are my answers.

  1. I am grateful for being able to go out into my own little garden and cut some hydrangeas to bring in for the celebrations.
  2. I acknowledge myself for diving into NaNoWriMo this year.
  3. I would like to celebrate the abundance of support I’ve received over the last while when I haven’t been feeling well.

Your turn!

Wake Up Your Creativity

Dancing Jesters in Ghent

With my recent travels and ensuing illness, my normal rhythms and familiar routines have been tossed to the wayside for almost a month! A part of me has longed to get back to regular things, like home-cooked favourites, guitar class and yes, even laundry!

And another part of me noticed something different…

Space!

What if I didn’t want to go back to everything the way it was? What if I wanted to create something different?

From out here, so much is possible!

When we’re outside of our normal routine, whether by choice or by chance, we have the opportunity to take a fresh look at our lives. It’s the perfect time to open up to options, ideas and possibilities.

Why not give things a little shake up?

Routine and order can be really important in our busy lives and creating habits like journaling or exercising can support us in moving healthily and positively towards our dreams.

But habits can also stop us from experiencing our everyday. We go through our routine so sleepily that we get to work and barely remember how we got there or what our breakfast tasted like. We go on automatic pilot as we clean our home, plan our meals, get to work, balance our budget, organize our to-do list, etc. And suddenly we’ve missed our morning, our day, our life!

My invitation to you this week is to break out of some of your habitual behaviours and experience the moment. I’m not suggesting that you throw your life out of whack, fall off the exercise wagon or live in chaos. What I am suggesting is that by playfully making a few simple changes to your routine, you can awaken yourself to experiencing each day and remind your brain that it can explore, discover and try new things.

To be creative, you have to be open to life. Authentic expression comes from your ability to connect and then respond in your own unique way to whatever it is that you encounter, whether it’s a touching moment, fierce weather, a grumpy cashier or powerful music. And to do that, you must be awake.

Shake it up to wake it up!

Here are some playful suggestions for breaking out and waking up:

  • Change your bed time.
  • Browse an unfamiliar section of the bookstore
  • Brush your teeth with your other hand
  • Change the part in your hair
  • Wear a colour you never wear
  • Listen to a different radio station
  • Dance while you do the dishes or load the dishwasher
  • Order something different
  • If you normally don’t, say “hello” first
  • Read a different section of the paper
  • Take a different route home
  • Get there early
  • Try a new fruit
  • Go media-free for a day
  • Wear that outfit you’ve been saving

The key is to awaken to your life and remind yourself that things can change – you can change them! After all, creativity makes things happen – and so can you!