Category: Reading Nook

Becoming a More Confident Traveller

Safe & Sound

Having just arrived home from a two-week trip to Holland, I can’t help but think back to when I set myself the goal of becoming a more confident traveller. I dreamed of exploring new places but found myself overwhelmed by all that I didn’t know or understand. How does the airport work? What about security? What should I pack? What can I bring on a plane? How do I get from the airport to the hotel? Should I stay in a hotel? How do I choose one? How do I do manage if I don’t speak the language? How do you even begin to find your way?

I started with setting an intention.

The moment I said, “I want to become a more confident traveller,” my world began to change.

Opportunities started to show up, like assisting Jennifer Louden at the Kripalu Centre or an invitation to visit my sister Suzie on the East Coast. There were things I wanted to do like go to the World Domination Summit in Portland and travel to Paris for my 10-year wedding anniversary. And so I started to say yes and I started to learn.

Being willing to learn is the beginning of everything.

I didn’t try to take everything in at once but instead I let each trip be a focal point for learning. In my creative life, I do this too, allowing each project to give me focus and direction as well as motivation to gain useful, practical knowledge that will serve me in the current project but also in many projects to come.

With traveling, first I learned to buy my own airline ticket online. I must have checked the order a thousand times before finally hitting “submit” but I did it. Then, because I was flying Air Canada, I focused on what their website told me about what I could pack, how early I should arrive, how to get a boarding pass, that kind of thing. Little by little, I was learning.

Trip by trip, I started to build my knowledge, to gain experience and my confidence started to grow. With each trip I stretched a little bit further. I travelled by myself. I travelled to a different country. I travelled on public transport. I travelled between two places in one trip. I travelled to a place where the language wasn’t English.

Now I can say I have travelled to Portsmouth, Portland, Halifax, Vancouver, Sedona, San Francisco, Paris, Avignon, Nice, Amsterdam, Brussels and more!

My confidence has grown exponentially and there is still much to learn. I remain afraid of flying, especially over the ocean, and though I may never be at ease with that aspect of the journey, I have strategies that support me. Most recently, thanks to a great suggestion from John Austin (thank you, John!) I brought my sketchbook and doodled on the plane. Filling up the pages with colour and line gave my body and mind a way to channel my anxious energy. I felt calmer as I worked on my Safe and Sound page both on the way to Amsterdam and back to Toronto. Another great tool in my confident traveller’s toolkit.

To gain confidence, eventually you must do the thing that you wish to gain confidence in.

I am a huge fan of preparation, even over-preparation! I know it calms my nerves when I have researched to the nth degree, when I have made and checked off every list (twice), when I have double (or triple) checked reservations, confirmations and what’s in my suitcase.

I am big believer in doing everything you can do to make it easier on yourself, especially by working with the truth of who you are. If calling makes you anxious, email. If arriving four hours early calms your nerves, do it. Give yourself all the understanding and loving support available as you cross over that thrilling, terrifying, glorious threshold of new learning.

Do everything you can to prepare and then go.

This is one thing I learned in the theatre, both as an actor and as a director. Do everything within your power to support success, work wholeheartedly, with passion and commitment, and when opening night arrives, let it go.Live it. Breathe it. Experience it. Do it. This is what you have been preparing for.

Let your preparation ground you. Trust yourself. And know that you can always ask for help.

As a highly sensitive person and a Canadian, I have a tendency to sit back quietly suffering while I try and figure things out for myself. On this trip I saw my much more direct Dutch father-in-law over and over again ask people how to get places, what was worth seeing and even, with great interest and curiosity, what they were doing. (“So, is this your boat?” “It’s lovely how you sit out here. Is this a restaurant or your own home?”) Over and over again he was met with helpful, interesting and friendly replies.

Learning to trust your ability to handle what comes up is the greatest confidence builder of all.

As the plane was descending on the way home, I watched a show I’d never seen before called “Staycation.” A New York couple hopped on the subway and went across town for an overnight adventure in Brooklyn. They stopped in eclectic little shops and restaurants and grabbed drinks in a local bar. As they sat alone in a neon-lit dive, laughing while enjoying the drink special of the day, I realized that one of the things that made their staycation an adventure was the risks they were willing to take. They risked that the food would be bad, that the bar was a bit seedy, that the shopkeeper would be unfriendly. They didn’t check Yelp or worry about whether it was the right place, the best place or the coolest place. They just risked it and had the experience.

This trip to Holland has been amazing and I am so proud of how much confidence I have gained as a traveller. Always looking to the next horizon, I see that for me there is a growing edge around loosening up, around asking for help and around allowing myself to get it wrong. It’s amazing how the lessons that show up in one thing tend to be the lessons that show up in all things. There’s always more to learn.

What adventure(s) do you want to go on? How might you make a start and build your confidence?

Over the next little while I will be sharing my Holland adventures, including a few Confident Traveller Tips that I hope you’ll find helpful. I hope you’ll enjoy coming on the journey with me.

Holland Sky

Learning How to Draw a Mandala

Draw a Mandala. Jamie Ridler Studios.

When Andrea invited me to be a part of the Magic of Mandalas blog hop, I felt a bit sheepish. I had never (never!) drawn a mandala in my life and didn’t know where to start. Considering my complete level of inexperience it made sense to say no – but many great adventures arise from choosing what doesn’t make sense! And so it was with mandalas.

I asked Andrea whether I could take part as a newbie and relay what I learn in the experience. She said yes and shared her great tutorial, How to Draw a Mandala (and why you want t0). With that and this simple video above, I was all set.

I began my mandala journey by focusing on the three basics: a dot, a circle and the number 8.

Draw a Mandala

First Mandalas in Black and White

When I learn something new, I like to start with keeping it really simple and unintimidating. I started off with a black pen and index cards. I find index cards a really useful medium for staying unattached and keeping it light and easy.  Right away I started to find the process engaging. When I work with groups or lead workshops, I always start by creating a circle, a safe and sacred space in which the work can begin. It occurred to me that the mandala circle was just such a place.

Journal Manjdalas. Jamie Ridler Studios.

Next Mandalas in A Journal

I started to have a lot of fun creating mandalas and they soon found their way into my journal. I started to get into a practice of looking around for shapes that were in my visual field and I would add them into the circle. That was a fun way to expand what had been a limited repertoire of lines and shapes and possibilities.

Mandalas Drawn in Colour. Jamie Ridler Studios.

Then Mandalas in Colour

As it became more comfortable to play with shapes and lines, I thought why not try some colour? Again I kept it simple, using just one coloured pen for each mandala. It was fun to add a new dimension. With each layer of exploration, I felt myself going deeper and deeper into mandala magic.

Playing with Fire Mandala

Adding More Colour

Next I returned to the simplicity of drawing a mandala with a black pen but then added colour. This was glorious. Creating and colouring the mandalas was as meditative as I had heard. It was a contained space where I could take a break, mentally and creatively, for a period of time. And because I kept the mandalas relatively small, I was able to turn to them often.

Heart Mandala. Jamie Ridler Studios

Playing with Colour Stories

I discovered mandals were a wonderful way to explore colour combinations. I played with familiar favourites and stretched into new colour zones. If I wondered how colours would get along, the mandala created the perfect ground to find out.

Adding Mandalas to Your Art Journal

Adding Mandalas to My Art Journal

As I spend time with mandalas, more and more ideas pop up. How might I add them to my art journal? What if I scanned them in black and white and played with colours on the computer? What if I created a mandala out of flowers, leaves and stone?

Already I have experienced the power of the mandala, the gift of the circle, the invitation to explore and discover.

It seems my journey with mandalas has just begun.  Has yours?

This is a part of Andrea Schroeder’s The Magic of Mandala’s Blog Hop. Explore more mandala’s through the link below!

mandala blog hop

The Magic of Mandalas Blog Hop is a radically inspiring sharing circle, with artists from around the globe sharing the stories behind their process of creating mandalas. Our mission: To inspire you to see new possibilities for your own creative practice.

Click here to discover new artists, soak up new ideas and fill up on creative inspiration to fuel your creative practice.

Creating Your Ideal Day

Ideal Day: Jamie in Paris
Jamie in Paris

Imagining your ideal day is a powerful way to begin inviting your dreams into your life. It’s a core exercise in many a self-help book and definitely in a coach’s magical toolkit. Here’s how to do it.

Imagining Your Ideal Day

Give yourself some quiet time to sit down with your journal and your imagination. Take yourself to the very first moment of your ideal day. How, when and where do you wake up? When you look around, what or who is there? What are you going to do with your day? Start to write about it in great detail. What do you eat for breakfast? What do you wear? Do you get dressed at all? Follow the narrative of the day and let yourself feel into it. Steep yourself in the day and let it become a part of you. Write down and experience what it feels like, looks like, sounds like, smells like.

Knowing what we want is the first step in welcoming it in.  Picturing your ideal day tunes your inner compass so that more and more you’ll find yourself naturally steering towards the life that you’ve imagined.

What else can you do to encourage your ideal day vision to come to life?

What elements of your ideal day can you live (or are you living) right now?

Once you have your perfect day on paper, look through all of the broad strokes and all little details of your ideal day to see what you can start living right now. And I mean right now. Today.

Did you wake up without an alarm clock? Could you do that tomorrow? How about Sunday? Go to your datebook and choose a day for “No alarm.” Write it in.

Did you do some yoga? Take time for some yoga today.

Did you go to a coffee shop and write? Do that.

Did you start your day with a green smoothie? Start doing that.

We underestimate how many of the little pieces of our big dream we can and even do have right now. Look for all the ways that you can start living your ideal day right now – and also to acknowledge all the ways that perhaps you already are.

Moving Closer to Your Ideal

Next, a look at the things that are slightly more out of reach and  start getting creative with all the ways you can get as close as possible to these things within your current resources .

In your ideal day vision, did you wake up in 200-count Egyptian cotton sheets?  What would be as close as possible? Fresh clean sheets? A well-made bed? What was the feeling the sheets gave you? Was it the sensory pleasure? How can you create that? Was it luxury? What feels luxurious that you can have today?

Did you wake up in Paris? What is it about Paris that’s appealing to you? Is it the beauty of the French language, the coffee shops and galleries, the sense of style? How can you bring those elements of Paris to your life right here and right now?

Look for the essence of the ideal elements and see how you can have and experience more of that starting now.

Inviting Your Ideal Day Closer

As well as living every bit of our ideal that’s available today and then getting as close as possible to that ideal wherever we can, how can you begin to bring that ideal day ever closer?

Did you wake up and get ready for a photo shoot? What’s one thing you could do to get closer to that? Do that today.

Did you wake up beside the love of your life? What’s one thing you could do to get closer to that? Do that.

For many of us, putting aside some savings is a key element. Start that today.

We can get shut down by making a project too big, by deciding that we need a complete itinerary to get to our destination. One way to get closer to your ideal day today is to brave taking whatever next step is in front of you. Trust that next steps and next steps will reveal themselves.

Start Living Your Ideal Day Today

We are often so much closer than we think to what we dream of. Instead of letting your vision of an ideal day become a dusty treasure written in your journal, use it as a road map, one that step by step will get you closer to your dreams.

Remembering How to Play

On My Desk. Jamie Ridler Studios.

Recently I cleaned up and out of the studio for a few days so I could turn it into a guest room for my brother. When I moved back in, it took about 90 minutes before I could look around and see index cards, markers, piles of paper, 3 journals, a glue stick and several notes to myself! I have to admit it’s the same in our living room. I can tidy everything up and then I sit down and before I know it I am surrounded by yarn, journals, a pencil case full of markers, a pair of scissors…

I explode into a creative studio wherever I am!

This is particularly true this summer as I’m having so much fun throwing myself into new creative projects. I just finished my very first ever crochet rag rug. (If you watch stART, you’ll have seen it). And I’m learning to knit all over again and have jumped (relatively) fearlessly into the world of cables. I’ve bought a mixed media journal that’s small enough I can tuck it in my purse. I’ve bought a little set of watercolours and have been experimenting with all sorts of different pens.

I feel like a kid again!

A lot of clients come to me because they want to invite more play into their life. They want to have more fun and feel more alive. Often when I ask them what they find fun or what kind of play they enjoy, they don’t know. The distance between their adult self and their little kid self has grown so vast and so far. But it doesn’t take much to bridge the gap at all.

It isn’t about time or space or energy or supplies. It isn’t even really about a particular activity. It’s about attitude!

When you were a kid, you weren’t just playing when you were skipping or swimming or dancing. You were also playing in waiting rooms and classrooms and likely, to your parents chagrin, at the dinner table. You were imagining and giggling and experimenting and wondering.  You didn’t take things so seriously!

It reminds me of that current commercial about how the things we did as kids didn’t always make sense. They make their point by showing things like a kid in a big yellow rain slicker standing in the bathtub under a shower head pouring rain. In the same vein, part of the appeal of the gorgeous photos we love so much on blogs and in magazines like Artful Blogging is that the people in those pictures are playing too! They carry helium-filled balloons in the park and paint their toenails each a different colour and wear daisy crowns in their wild hair.

You can play too.

You can skip on the way to work. You can sidewalk chalk hopscotch in front of your building. You can wear a tutu and flowers in your hair. You can laugh too loud and stay up too late. You can make bad jokes and sing really loud. You can do somersaults and cartwheels and spend hours staring at the sky or into the grass. You can spend a whole day eating licorice and reading books. You can use your imagination. You can play.

Get playful this week.

  • What feels like play to you?
  • How can you play at work? At home? En route? In the bathtub? In the backyard? On the subway?
  • When you were a little kid, what did you love?
  • What was the mood of that activity? Was it adventure? Contemplation?  Magic? Heroics? How could you bring more of that into your life right now – today?
  • Give yourself the opportunity to have some fun. Put all the adult baggage down for just a few* and have some fun. Get out there and play!

*I promise you it will be right there where you left it when you get back. If you come back!

Your Life in a Photo

On My Creative Desk. Jamie Ridler Studios.

These piles on my desk reflect my creative life:

One little instagram photo; a snapshot of my life.

Take a look around and take a photo or draw a picture that tells a story of your life in this moment. What’s on your desk? On your nightstand? In your fridge? What reflects this moment in time for you?

One little instagram photo; inspiration to create a life.

Not only does this practice encourage us to pay attention to the present moment but it can also invite us to consider what we would love the next moment to hold. What would you love to be in your snapshots this time next year? Next month? Next week? This afternoon?

Invite it in, step by step, choice by choice. Before you know it, you’ll find yourself with snapshots of a life you love.

You Can’t Do It All (Don’t You Hate That?)

Creative Chaos.
I love life. A lot. I love tasting, touching, feeling, seeing, hearing, doing. I’m curious about things, intrigued by things, inspired by things. I have a million things I want to learn, a billion things I want to create and a zillion things I want to do!

I bet you can relate.

And what happens when we try to do it all, see it all, say yes to it all, buy it all, eat it all, read it all, make it all?

It’s the weirdest thing.

Instead of getting full, we get weighed down and depleted.

It’s counter-intuitive and perfectly normal.

See, life is bigger than you.

There’s always more to see, more to do, more to learn, more to become, more to experience, more to love. There are more ideas, more projects and more dreams to come true.

There’s more on earth than you can consume!

This doesn’t mean that life is too big and needs to be contained and controlled and this doesn’t mean that you’re too small and need to be stuffed or miss out.

I started to understand this on my honeymoon. Justin and I went to a resort in the Dominican Republic. Because it was all-inclusive, every meal was a wonderfully abundant buffet. Talk about the perfect scenario for over-indulgence! At least that’s what I anticipated. But after a few days, I discovered an unexpected ease. I didn’t have to over-stuff my plate and myself because there would be another meal soon and it would also be wonderful. I could have as much as felt good and trust that there would be more.

I’ve found this to be true with life as well.

If you don’t pursue this idea, there will be another. If you don’t go to this conference, there will be something else to attend. If you don’t get into this art show, there will be another one to apply to. If you didn’t like this book, there’s more at the library. And if you didn’t get a chance to read a newsletter, I guarantee you, there’s another one coming.

Now, I don’t say this with naiveté. I know that many of us, myself included, have not only feared there won’t be more but we’ve experienced there not being more. Life is rich but it also has its own sense of timing and no guarantees. There are times when we find ourselves needing something and it isn’t there.

But here’s the thing. If I double the size of my meal today because I’m scared of being hungry tomorrow, I may still be hungry tomorrow.

Over-stuffing ourselves now does not help us later.

You and I are blessed with a bit of time, a bit of space and a bit of energy to spend on some of the wide array of riches life has to offer.

If you step in with your whole heart, pursue and enjoy even a bit of what calls to you, your life will be rich and full and extraordinary, even if you didn’t do it all.

Our Choices; Our Lives

Your Choices Create Your Life

Last week, for the first time ever, I went to Michaels, the famous crafts store. (Yes, it’s true. I had never been to Michaels before!)

When you walk into Michaels you can’t help but be struck by the reams and reams of choice – shelves filled with glitter and sparkle, baskets and baskets of yarn, row upon row of jewellery fixings and the colours, wow, the colours! In ribbons alone there were hundreds of colours to choose from.

And that’s what got me thinking about choice.

I noticed right away that for each craft area, whether it was jewellery or cake decorating, whether it was something I do all the time or something I’ll likely never do, I found myself exploring what I would choose.

“If I was going to make a cake, I would make this one.”

“If I was going to pick a pendant, it would be this one.”

“If I was going to get washi tape, it would be this one.”

It reminded me of when I was a little girl and my mom would bring home pattern books from the fabric store. I would curl up on the floor of her sewing closet, cozy amidst piles of material and I would pore over every page. Each pattern would come with several options and I would sit there thinking,

“This collar but that length.”

“This waistline and that colour.”

“Those sleeves and that neckline.”

And last weekend when I was making my Full Buck Moon dreamboard, I noticed the same process. As I flip through hundreds of images, I’m looking for the ones that speak specifically to me.

“Yes, that dog, that feather, those flowers.”

“This, not that.”

“This is me. This is not me. This is the me I am becoming.”

Our choices are micro-movements on the way to our dreams.

When I choose to go for a run or paint or I write a letter or wear red, each choice is an opportunity to know myself better, to express myself more, to unfurl what’s in me, to move toward what calls me.

Sitting at the blank canvas, I choose purple and Shannon chooses orange. Out for dinner with Suzie, she’ll choose seafood and I’ll choose anything else! Picking paint with Justin, he’ll will look for striking contrast and I’ll look for monochromatic delight.

These are our ways. These preferences signal who we are. Our choices become how we live.

This doesn’t mean that suddenly every choice becomes heavy, fraught with the burden of the entire weight of our life and our identity. They’re more like holograms, even the smallest piece holds the essence of the whole. Each piece does not have to hold the whole weight because every one does.

Let it be light. Pay attention to your choices and enjoy them. Know that in each day there are millions of little opportunities for you to lightly, easily step towards your full expression and the life you dream of. This might look like saying yes to raspberries, yoga and sleeping in or it might look like choosing an early morning hike and a purple sweater. It might look like champagne cocktails with friends downtown or hours of introspective writing at a local café.

What will you choose?

What do your choices express about who you are?

How will your choices impact who you become?

Choose a Boa