Doing less to ultimately do more

First, I found out that there was an error when I signed up for an e-course and my payment wasn’t processed.  So I took a step back and realized that I felt relief at the potential of having that off my radar right now.  Then, the weather changed and I was finally able to open windows and sit outside with a cup of coffee in the mornings and just breathe and watch hummingbirds flutter about.  And I realized… I am not taking any classes at the moment! This hasn’t happened for so long and it’s a welcome pause.  I will begin Life Book 2013 in January, but until then, I have time to CREATE and to catch up on photo editing and scrapbooking.

Finally, I read these words by Aby Garvey of Simplify 101:

When you focus on fewer changes or projects at once,
you’ll be able to invest more of your time, attention and energy
into the project you’re working on. This means you’ll increase
your rate of success. In turn, your success will fuel more
success, giving you the confidence and energy to move on to the
next project, issue or change. As counterintuitive as it may
seem, the fewer things you focus on at once, the faster you’ll
improve all areas of your life.

I have a multi-tiered to-do list and I know some of you do too.  There’s the “today” action items, the “this week” list, and several long-term lists.  List items frequently move around and get re-prioritized.  I strive to do as productivity guru David Allen suggests and process items as they come up if possible, but looking around the house in preparation for having 33 people over for Turkey Day next week (yes, you read that right… gulp), I saw lots of clutter.

Leo Babauta defines clutter as anything that is not in its right place.  Yesterday I decided to conquer it all.  I filled three huge bags with recycling while my daughter was at preschool (she refuses to throw away anything… even trash) and now every item in her room and playroom has a place it belongs.  I also recycled the stacks of back-dated magazines on and under our coffee table.  I started at one end of the house and moved anything I came across back to its rightful place.

My daughter’s artwork is either on display, tucked away in a keepsake box, or photographed and recycled.  Craft supplies are in the craft closet.  The bills are in their “to be paid” file; invitations are in their “upcoming events” folder and on my calendar; things that have been laying around for months are gone.  After a large dropoff at a recycle bin, after transferring out-of-season items to the garage, after donating and giving away some toys (sssh!), books, and clothes, and after finally hanging up a few pictures (we’ve lived here a year already… it’s time!), the house is ready for anything.

Empty surfaces help me to exhale and bring me inner calm.  Now I can focus on the next project… turkey day decorations!

What’s happening with all of you?

Posted in Home, Photography | Tagged , , , , , , , , | 17 Comments

New in the shop

All of my new print projects stem from my desire to save some fundage to buy a new camera lens. I shared with you my new fine art shop already and now I want to show you some greeting cards and a 2013 calendar that I created (monthly images shown above). I know there aren’t very many people who use wall calendars anymore, but I made this one just for fun and thought I’d share it with you all.  I have fortunately had two buyers already so I’m that much closer to my new lens!

These 5×7 blank cards may be a better fit for you. I added them and two calendar options to my Etsy shop. You can buy a single card or a variety pack of 6. Let me know what you think or if you have any other design ideas. I’m all ears.  🙂

In the fine art shop, you can customize any image to your liking and make it into a greeting card, a framed print, a metal or acrylic print, or even a canvas.  There are a plethora of size options too.  For example, for the image at left (apologies for the bad screenshot), I selected a black frame, a 1.25″ cream mat with a black edge, and a foam backing.  Easy!

To make a custom greeting card, select any image, “choose greeting card” and from there you can rotate the image, select a black or white background, and add text to the inside in 18pt Arial.  For example…

Thanks for all of your encouragement with this new endeavor.  I’ll be offering a special deal for subscribers on Friday.  Stay tuned!

Posted in Cards, Creativity, Photography, Quotations | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , | 4 Comments

November photo-heart connection

I haven’t participated in Kat’s Photo-Heart Connection since August so it’s definitely time! When I looked through the photos I took in October, this one stood out for me.  It’s one of only a handful of nature photos that I snapped at a children’s fall festival.  Something about it says to me, “make the best of any situation.”

Anne LamottSometimes I feel compelled to take a photo.  This was one of those times.  The way these wildflowers were growing sideways cheered me for a moment.  I also love taking a shot from a different perspective.  I applied Kim Klassen‘s new “Carol” texture (from her Oasis series) and erased it over the petals so they would show their original brightness.  

Haven’t done it before? You can learn more about how to find your Photo-Heart Connection here.

Click these links to see my May, June, and July photo-heart connection posts.

Posted in Creativity, Mindfulness, Photo-Heart Connection, Photography, Quotations | Tagged , , , , , , | 6 Comments

Gratitude tree: what are you thankful for?

One of the Big Picture Boot Camp prompts by Amy Powers was to make a “Celebration Tree.”  I like the idea of decorating the house for autumn and also of making the idea of gratitude more tangible to my young daughter.  This is a basic tree that I can change as each season or occasion comes about… I am picturing hanging cute pictures for a birthday or maybe some flowers in springtime.

I had ordered some manzanita branches in preparation for this project and bought some small wooden spools as well.  The other supplies were a $1 bucket, Plaster of Paris, a bit of scrapbook paper, various ribbons, glitter paints, clear glitter glue, sheet moss, and baker’s twine, most of which I already had on hand.

I arranged my branches and held them in place in the silver tin bucket with masking tape and then poured the Plaster of Paris mixture around them and let it dry overnight for a week.  It probably would have dried in 30 minutes but this project was accomplished in many tiny steps over a period of about two weeks!

I used some quick-dry adhesive to wrap little pieces of scrapbook paper and ribbon around the spools, and then added the words of what we are grateful for on top.  My daughter and I decided to have one for her school, one for each of the three people in our immediate family, and “taking care of each other.” The rest were from Amy’s printout and include words like togetherness, love, nourishment, family, kindness.  You can put anything meaningful to you.

Rather than sew or glue buttons to both ends of the spools as Amy did, I painted orange and red Martha Stewart glitter acrylic craft paint on the ends.  I just couldn’t see threading and unthreading and rethreading a needle that many times! I sewed the baker’s twine onto some colorful buttons, looped it through the spools, and tied a knot at the tops to form a loop.

I randomly sponge painted some clear glitter glue onto the branches just for a little sparkle.  Mine is a little bottle of studio g from the dollar bins of our craft store.  I don’t know why it’s looking green here…

Let it all dry, decorate the outside with the sheet moss and some ribbon…

… and involve your family as much as you’d like.  These little hands are my daughter’s.

I already love how it looks in our entryway! It’s another way to bring the outside in.

What do you think? Could you see yourself making something like this? I encourage you to try… each step is fun and easy.

Posted in Creativity, Home, Kindness, Mindfulness | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , | 17 Comments

Paradigm shift: how blogging changed my life

Art McCrackenIt’s probably not much of a surprise to you that I love this blog.  I have enjoyed sharing my thoughts, photography, and creative projects here for almost two years.  (Wow… this is my 408th post!)

It’s funny how it happened.  When I was first urged to start a blog in my Momoir Project class on publishing and writing (see “A sisterhood of writers“), I strongly resisted.  Yet almost as soon as I published my first “hello world” post, I also started taking online classes and building a community of friends.  Umteen classes later, I have made such dear friends and found an amazing sense of community.  They are not at all “virtual,” as we communicate often through our blogs and comment sections, our Facebook and Flickr groups, via e-mail, and in class forums.  We encourage, lift up, and inspire each other every single day (see also “Heart to heart: thank you to each one of you“).

So, when Art McCracken (of My Crazy Life, a brand new monthly workshop) asked us to think of a time in our lives or to try to identify a specific event that shifted our paradigm or point of view, I thought of blogging and this online community that I have become part of.  First I pondered creating something about motherhood because that is what led me to the writing class, which led to all of this.  I chose this topic instead because it’s more MINE than the whole “identity as a mom” thing.  Does that make sense? We were to create a before and after canvas on this topic.  First, the finished product:

My Crazy Life assignment 1Step one: gather supplies.  This may be my favorite part because I love handling and looking at my craft goodies.  When everything I think I may want is laid out on the desk around me, I am positively giddy.  (And I try to be very neat when I work, putting things away and cleaning brushes as I go, so I am almost just as giddy when it’s all cleaned up.)

Step two: get rid of the white.  I chose various shades of blue paint to represent my life before blogging (a sort of purity and isolation), green for a new beginning, and purple because it’s my favorite color and evokes a sense of passion and purpose to me.  I also mixed them all a bit, adding some purples and greens to the left side and some blues to the right side.  The right side is a shimmer acrylic paint because I wanted that side to shine.  (I finished that half of the canvas with sparkle Mod Podge.)

Step three: add the middle section: the change.  This would be when I first began to understand that I could build a group of like-minded friends through online classes.  The girls in the Momoir classes were instant connections for me.  I gained so much in their responses to what I shared, giving me such a sense of validation.  Starting this blog is also part of the middle section.  The main idea here is that I made something happen to create positive change in my life.

The clock stamps are meant to be part of the change agent.  Of course when you look back at the order of events, it all seems to make sense, one thing leading to another.  Living it is a different story.  When I took my first online class and then created this blog, I did not know what friendships would come from it.  And now… wow.  It’s gone so quickly and yet those beginning posts seem to be ages ago.

Step four: the time before the change.  This was a very happy time, and yet it was solitary compared to how I feel now.  I had in-person friendships, my family, a fulfilling job, tons to read, then the birth of my daughter.  I used these chipboard flowers to represent those wonderful aspects of my life, and yet they are the same color as the background.  I used the modeling paste and some bubble wrap to try to show that there were parts of me below the surface wanting to emerge.

Step five: describing attributes of life with all these fabulous new friends.  Photography is obviously a huge part of it, so I included this camera button right after the clock stamp.  The very bottom right corner of the canvas has the YOU button as the center of a large circle, all rays emanating from it.  This sense that I can be authentically me and create art and blog posts and forge new friendships is the main point of this canvas.  And of course, it’s all about the real connections with fellow photography/art/blog/book/scrapbook lovers.

I was on a roll when making this that I didn’t want to wait for the ink or glue to dry so I used my heat gun to speed up the process.  The coffee cup stamp is a symbol of the true connections also… people I would love to actually sit down with and chat.  “The days are long, but the years are short” is a phrase that I’ve heard many many times since I became a parent.  It’s been brought home to me in different ways by different people, but it has really helped me to appreciate each “today” that I have with my sweet girl, however exasperating she can be at times.

The little birdie button is in homage to the Brave Girls Club and the Soul Restoration course I took.  Life-changing for sure.  I had to include “good stuff” because Kim Klassen says this often, as well as “s’gud.”

These short words and phrases are to be rays of sunshine; things friends may say to me or I to them.  There are other little pieces too: a sticker with a letter posted in Paris to represent the month of reading and posting about all things French; the flower button to represent falling in love with all things macro; small circles throughout in various patterns to echo that voice within that is finally singing her song.

So that’s it, friends.  A whirlwind of a canvas but really really fun.  Thank you to each of you for following along all this time.  I am truly grateful for each connection. 🙂

Posted in Creativity, E-courses, Mindfulness, Photography | Tagged , , , , , , , | 18 Comments

Photos of mindful moments – OLW November 1 blog hop

I am still doing too much but I’m definitely getting better.  Today I planted some colorful pansies in our front garden and I remembered to savor the cool air and sunshine and to sit and enjoy my work at the end.  That is major progress, peeps!

Our October assignment was to create another photo spread with our word in mind.  This month, I did manage to keep the assignment in mind when I was out and about, so I did much better than last month (when I thought about and completed the assignment on the last day of the month)! Looking back at my photos from October, these stand out to me as specifically “mindfulness-” related and I’ll tell you how at the end…

About my photos: 1) You already know I’m a sucker for gorgeous arrangements of clouds. This one and #3 really struck me as beautiful.  2) This was from our nature walk in the park in Pittsburgh.  The dried leaves still lingering on the branch reminded me of the change of seasons and of letting go.  4) This little buddy and I shared a few minutes together just staring.  He must have thought the camera lens was my eye and was enraptured.  I was seeing how close I could get to him without scaring him off.  It was “mindful” because that is all I was thinking about.  5) I loved wandering among the wildflowers at a pumpkin patch we went to with our daughter.  That entire experience was enjoyable because she was doing so many things that were new to her.  My hubby and I were amazed and laughing.  6) The zoo had pumpkins floating in the aquarium tanks last weekend and this turtle was all over it! I couldn’t stop watching him.

7) Nature walk/fall leaves with the hubby – that doesn’t happen very often and I appreciated it and wanted to capture it.  8) I saw a heart in this leaf.  9) This was an accident but my daughter noticed that the poppies in the picture from Italy and the roses were the same color.  We admired them for awhile together and I think she took this photo.  10) and 12) What would it be like to live here? The long driveways, the covered patios, the large trees, the stone? So beautiful.   11) Thus far, this is the largest acorn I’ve seen.  Thank goodness it didn’t fall on my head!

With two assignments to go, I’m contemplating what my word will be for 2013.  If you haven’t done this before, I highly recommend it.  Even if you fall behind or don’t complete the assignment one month, you’re still a better person for taking a few steps in the direction of bettering yourself.  You can find more info about it on my e-course history page.

 * * * * *

I’m so glad to be part of this blog hop!  Some of the artwork these ladies do is just incredible! The rest of the participants are listed below.  I encourage you to visit every blog for more creative fun.

You can read other posts related to my OLW here.   I look forward to visiting again with you on Monday.

Margie    http://xnomads.typepad.com

Monica    http://scrapinspired.com/category/one-little-word/

Cheri    http://cheriandrews.blogspot.com

Ruth     http://suburbansahm.blogspot.com

Lisa    http://backtoallen.com/category/challenges/one-little-word/

Mrs Wookie    http://mrswookieswanderings.blogspot.com/

Veronica     www.veronicanorris.typepad.com

Monica    http://questtoperfectimperfection.blogspot.com/

Kelly    http://mindingmynest.com

Naomi    http://www.poeticaperture.com  <— You are here.

 

 

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Posted in Mindfulness, One Little Word, Photography | Tagged , , | 16 Comments