Tuesday, March 13, 2012

I Am Real

"And for each of us there is a script written that is contoured to our deepest passions, that reflects our core character and our truest calling. We are written to be real, and there is something in every heart that knows when we are and when we are not... If we will read our story, especially our tragedies, then we will better understand what forms our passion. And we will be better prepared to be real as we say yes and no.
What is your passion?"
                                    To Be Told by Dan Allender, PHD   

I am passionate about the arts... visual and media arts
I am passionate about drama and the drama of story... "my life is a stage"
I am passionate about dance, movement and sound...
and
I am passionate about healing... healing of the broken hearted, wounded, pained.
I am passionate about healin of the mind, body and soul
and
I am passionate about SPIRIT... redemption and restoration
I am passionate about intimacy with my MAKER
and the freedom this gives me to be real.
I know who i am.
I am named.
I am woman, daughter, sister, friend, confidant, counselor, mentor, teacher artist, dancer
I am blessed. I am loved. I am desired.
I am destined.
I am destined to live a full life that is true to me,
I am destined to change, be change, create change in a form that is onl true for me.
I am defined not by those i walk with but the path i choose to walk in,
I am defined not by the color of my skin but the conent of my act.
Look at me.
See me.
I am here.
I am real.

Monday, February 13, 2012

Grieving Necessary endings

I measure every grief I meet  
With analytic eyes;
I wonder if it weighs like mine,  
Or has an easier size. 
I wonder if they bore it long,       
Or did it just begin?
I could not tell the date of mine, 
It feels so old a pain.  
I wonder if it hurts to live, 
And if they have to try,      
And whether,
could they choose between,  
They would not rather die.  
I wonder if when years have piled—  
Some thousands—
on the causeOf early hurt,
if such a lapse       
Could give them any pause;  
Or would they go on aching still 
Through centuries above,
Enlightened to a larger pain  
By contrast with the love.        
The grieved are many, I am told;  
The reason deeper lies,—
Death is but one and comes but once,  
And only nails the eyes.  
There ’s grief of want, and grief of cold,—        
A sort they call “despair”;
There ’s banishment from native eyes,  
In sight of native air. 
And though I may not guess the kind  
Correctly, yet to me        
A piercing comfort it affords 
In passing Calvary,  
To note the fashions of the cross, 
Of those that stand alone,Still fascinated to presume        
That some are like my own.
     Emily Dickinson (1830-86)

In his book "Necessary Endings", Psychologist Henry Cloud says, "endings are a natural part of the universe and your life and business must face them, stagnate or die. They are an inherent reality... there are different kinds of endings... learning how to tell one from another will ensure some successes and prevent many failures and much misery, ending substantial pain and turmoil that you or your business may now be encountering... be comfortable and confident in seeing, negotiating and even celebrating some endings that maybe a door to a future brighter than you could have imagined."
I am not a fan of change. Celebrating endings is a new notion for me because most endings, for me, signify sadness, pain and loss.
In his book Callings, Gregg Levoy says, "Death is a threshold experience, as are callings , and it's not uncommon for people to take stock before proceeding".
The common theme with them both is that for something new to start, something old has to end, or as this case may be... die.
As i contemplate and prepare for my own funeral for class this week, and think of my eulogy, i realise a common thread in different areas of my life right now. I have just petitioned to graduate from my master's program in four months, so that journery is coming to a close. In my sculpture class i am working on a sculpture piece in memory of my mother. And as i curve out her face, i remember her, i speak to her leading to the longest artmaking project i have ever done. And then the subject this week in my counselling class is grief: mourning the losses in my life.
In my counselling class, my teacher used the Christian story of Moses to create a strong visual illustration on the subject. She asked us to imagine Moses' mother weaving the basket that she would hide her son in, to imagine her pain, her fear, her sorrow and then placing her little baby in that basket and trusting him to the treacherous, predator-ridden waves of the river Nile. Imagine her prayers, her grief, her loss. But then on the other end of the river is Pharoah's daughter who recieves this unexpected gift, this bundle of joy. The moral of the story? I need to put my "basket" into the "Nile". I need to open my clenched fists and let go of the "dying" things i am holding tightly onto, and open them to recieve the new.
When i see pattern, i know when to take a hint.
It is time to grieve and celebrate the endings and open my arms out to new beginings.

Tuesday, January 31, 2012

Memento Mari!

“There will come a day when I die and do not rise, so I would rather die doing what I love than what I don’t.”
Gregg Levoy, Callings: Finding and Following an Authentic Life

A Memento Mori - a reminder of the fact that humans fail and make mistakes; intended as a reminder of the fact that humans die.

The world around me is a constant reminder that humans fail and make mistakes. The world I come from is full of the consequences of our failure and mistakes. Life is short. While it is inspiring to have something to remind me that life is short and so pursue my dreams, I would like a memento-mori that celebrates creative spirit; a memento-mori that reminds me everyday not just how fragile life is but how exciting and wonderful it can be in its fragility when I let go and live creatively.
A memento mari!!!


Figure 1: Azuukuka (She awakens) Jan2012
Memento Mari - a reminder of the fact that humans create;intended as a reminder of the fact to celebrate life .
“Azuukuka” is my memento-mari. The first sculpture piece I have done solely from my mind, with no references or photos to go by.
Just my own imagination.

We need to learn to allow the tensions between head and heart to hammer out a compromise-meaning a promise together.”
Gregg Levoy, Callings: Finding and Following an Authentic Life

It has been a long journey to the compromise between my head and heart tensions. My heart is to create fantastical figures, to create stories in clay and felt and wood and anything that can be molded. My heart spends a lot of time on the Weta Workshop website unable to decide between the design studio or models and miniatures. My head on the other hand has worked the probability of a little African girl ever working at the World re-known Weta Workshop in NewZealand. Zero. Have you seen how amazing those people are? Do you know that they already have 5,000 portfolios on file of people who want to work in that workshop?
My heart is to travel the world telling stories and being a part of life’s stories. My head reminds me that traveling costs money and telling stories needs equipment and can be done by a thousand other people. My head reminds my heart that I can teach art, I can be a Communications Specialist. I have done that before and been successful at it. And well paid at that!
My heart reminds my head about the number times we looked up into the planes flying overhead wondering where the people on it were going or coming from, or when we spend a lot of time reading the National Geographic magazine. My heart reminds my head of the longing, the sighing, the wondering. My head says settle down. Stop dreaming. Be grateful you are alive.
So my head and my heart have come to a compromise. That while I “work” at whatever it is that will provide a roof over our head and keep us healthy, "Azuukuka" is right by our side reminding us that we are alive and within us is the amazing ability to create. That we will find all means to do both. To “work” and create. And be open to the creating becoming the “work”. For without the creating, the “work” will be death.