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Thursday, December 27, 2012

A time to unleash our dreams

Unleashing Your Dreams

Ah, a New Year. A clean slate. A fresh start full of possibilities. It's a time to ask ourselves, "What do I want to invision and create for myself this year?"

What if this year it was not about losing a few pounds or saving more money? What if, instead, we looked within to see what "inner callings" are waiting for fulfillment? 

It's not always easy to know what our truest self wants--at least not without taking the time to slow down and listen. This month we are honored to offer you that opportunity--a daylong visioning and painting retreat on Saturday January 26th to assist you with discovering the life of your dreams and creating a blueprint for living it. We'll be joined by Tamie Rising, a certified transformational life coach whose passion is to help people achieve new heights of success, meaning and spiritual aliveness.


Wishing you a fulfilling and abundant 2013 and beyond!
Jen and Steph


Tuesday, November 27, 2012

Peace On Earth Begins Inside


"Nothing can bring you peace but yourself". – Ralph Waldo Emerson

Wow... It's hard to believe we are writing the December update already! This year has been an incredible one that has only been possible because of you. A beautiful community is forming at Nectar and it brings us such joy to know the studio is warm and full of our painting friends.

A theme has started to develop during our Friday morning painting sessions: Learning to accept that which we cannot change. What we all seem to be finding out in our own way as we paint each week is how to just "let it be". Making friends with what is "up" and having the courage to just be with it instead of trying to change it in a way that seems pleasing to us. This is a huge step toward inner peace. When we cultivate inner peace we automatically begin to see things on the outside shift. We are able to look at the world with a fresh perspective and the world responds in kind.

We have several opportunities to paint this month. We will be painting every Friday in December, as well as Saturday morning Dec 8th. We would love to see you!

Wishing you peace this holiday season,
Steph and Jen


Wednesday, October 17, 2012

Coming Home To Ourselves: A Collage Project

 
                       "One must endeavor to Love oneself Abundantly." - Sharon Salzberg

I
n this 6 week series, Stephanie Gray will guide us on a journey of self-discovery through writing and collage. Each evening will begin with some journaling prompts inspired by the book "When You Think You're Not Enough: The Four Life-Changing Steps to Loving Yourself" by Daphne Rose Kingma, followed by collage. We will each be collaging a box we have personally picked out for this project. Our collages will be mirroring our truest self, so bring any sort of box that calls to you. All other materials will be provided. Reading of the book is not required but is encouraged.

$100 for all 6 sessions. $20 gets you registered.
(Refundable up to 72 hrs before first session)
November 7th - December 12th.
email or call to register: creativenectar@hotmail.com or 816.550.6728
 

Tuesday, September 18, 2012

There Are No Mistakes

 “Nothing whatsoever should be grasped at or clung to." - Buddha
Lately, things at Nectar have been perplexing to me and I feel lost. Last year at this time I felt very on purpose and on fire. I KNEW that opening  this workshop space with Jenny was exactly what I was supposed to do with my life. I had been told by movies and magazine articles and Oprah that if I figured out what it was I loved to do the rest would fall into place. Who hasn't heard the phrase, "Do what you love and the money will follow"? Or how about this one..."If you build it, they will come."
So that's what I did.I figured out the one thing I loved most was process painting and realized that I didn't want to just paint by myself, but to share it with as many people as possible. I truly believed that a year and 8 months into this, the studio would be able to support itself. Instead, we have seen a steady drop in registrations for workshops and painting sessions alike. We have had to cancel several things in the last few months and it doesn't feel good.

Perhaps, I have been naive. I knew not everyone who walked through Creative Nectar's door would have the same reaction to the process as I do. But I never once saw it looking like this. And maybe that's ok. I am suddenly reminded of the painting guidelines at the studio. "There are no mistakes". What if this is all exactly the way it needs to be? What if I could stand in the very moment of it all and be with what is happening, without judgement? Once again, I am learning from the process. Many times I have been painting something that I really thought needed to look a certain way...or that my mind wanted to take in a certain direction, only to find that when I allowed what wanted to come into the painting, it was far more powerful than I could have ever imagined.

Going with the flow is a lesson the process is continually teaching me. Sometimes it is much easier said than done, especially when the subject in question is something I am so desperately in love with. That's the key I suppose, learning to hold things with an open palm; no grasping. And learning to love without expectation. 

Thursday, August 2, 2012

Find True Nourishment...

Plate of Mind:
A Day of Mindful Eating and Process Painting
Saturday, September 8th, 2012
10 am - 4:00 pm • $85 (materials included)


Join us for a day of renewal and reconnection while learning tools for present-moment awareness and creative expression in a safe, non-judgmental environment.

Karen Ialapi, RD, LD, CDE, will lead the morning session in exploring what mindfulness around eating really means and how to bring more mindfulness to your relationship with food.

During the lunch break, you will have the opportunity for a silent lunch experience (bring a sack lunch) or to go out for lunch on your own.

Stephanie and Jenny will lead a process painting session in the afternoon, helping you to tune in to your inner experience and use painting as a tool for self-discovery and expression. Take time to slow down, play deeply and find true nourishment.

Space is limited to 10 participants. $20 deposit reserves your spot and is refundable up to 48 hours before event.

For more information or to register email us at: creativenectar@hotmail.com or give us a call: 816.550.6728

Sunday, July 22, 2012

Coming Out To My Greatness


"You are the light of the world." —Matthew 5:14

It's taken over three decades for me to return to the magnificence that I knew as a 3-year-old. When I was 3, I knew I was loved. True, not everyone has a fortunate childhood... But at 3 years old I lived in the moment and played and expressed my greatness and smiled and laughed and didn't try to change a damn thing about myself. I was pure joy in expression.

Something happened along the way. I can't remember exactly when...Perhaps it was when I started public school and learned there was a "right" and "wrong" way to do things. Maybe it was after my parents separated and I learned how to achieve to earn attention. By the time I was 13, I was uncomfortable in my own skin and repulsed by the changes going on in my body. At 15, I started writing down every calorie I ate and hovered somewhere between the worlds of craving and shaming. On the outside I was an "A" student and a "good girl" (for the most part). But on the inside, I was an empty shell. No one was home.

It took another decade of exhausting myself by striving to prove my worth while simultaneously starving my body and spirit—all the while hurting myself and others—before I was able to slow down enough to get curious about the black hole at the center of my being.

What I found behind my neurotic striving and controlling—through insight meditation, process painting and other mindfulness practices over the years—was a seemingly-bottomless pit of sadness and grief which simply wanted to be feltWhen we are driven by fear, the fear itself is far scarier than that which we are avoiding and running from. 

And yet, to my surprise, something existed on the other side of the grief. I found the sweetness of new life, like the purity of a newborn child. A rebirth of my truest, divine self. A homecoming.

Marianne Williamson puts it beautifully in her book A Return to Love
"Our deepest fear is not that we are inadequate. Our deepest fear is that we are powerful beyond measure. It is our light, not our darkness that most frightens us. We ask ourselves, Who am I to be brilliant, gorgeous, talented, fabulous? Actually, who are you not to be? You are a child of God. Your playing small does not serve the world. There is nothing enlightened about shrinking so that other people won't feel insecure around you. We are all meant to shine, as children do. We were born to make manifest the glory of God that is within us. It's not just in some of us; it's in everyone. And as we let our own light shine, we unconsciously give other people permission to do the same. As we are liberated from our own fear, our presence automatically liberates others."
Over these years and with lots of help, I have healed my relationship with food. What used to be an obsessive, torturous experience has become one of the ways I can nourish myself and my spirit, and take in the vitality that this world offers. 

I have also healed my relationship with my sexuality, finding—with surprise—that once I stopped trying to control myself and accepted and loved what was happening, my true nature as a Lesbian emerged naturally.

Each of us is created in the image and likeness of God—of pure goodness. It is the small human mind, the judgement, the mass-delusion of society, the world of "right" and "wrong" which overshadow our truth and place our light under a bushel. 

Our job in this lifetime is to uncover our greatness and remember the truths we have forgotten over time. As we come out to our own greatness, we give others permission to do the same. It is the Hero's Journey—the journey of a lifetime. Coming home to ourselves, and coming out to the world. Expressing the greatness that we are.

In gratitude,
Jenny

PS: Stephanie and I are so excited to offer a process painting experience as part of the upcoming "Out in the Open" LGBT retreat at Unity Village, Sept 27-30th. You can find more info at www.unityvillage.org/lgbt.

Wednesday, July 11, 2012


Join us this Thursday evening July 12th from 7:30-9:30 for Creative Nectar Studio's first "house concert"! Victor James Dougherty combines years of guitar and vocal performance with soulful lyrics to create memorable songs that inspire and transform. This intimate setting promises to deliver a magical night of conscious music and candlelight.

$5 suggested love offering/feel free to bring your own refreshments. Please RSVP to reserve your spot as seating is limited. creativenectar@hotmail.com

Wednesday, July 4, 2012

Declaring Independence From Society's Idea Of Beauty


“You are imperfect, permanently and inevitably flawed. And you are beautiful.”   - Amy Bloom
 
I can't think of a better day to post this blog than on America's day of Independence because what I am writing about, is a bit of my own independence and freedom. My body's independence from 43 years of struggle and oppression against my cruel and abusive thoughts and my own freedom to love and care for my body just as she is, even though she doesn't doesn't look anything like what is presented on the covers of magazines. I decided to share this on the studio's website because this all suddenly made sense in the middle of a painting workshop. The process works in a deeply subtle way. And even when I think it hasn't made a bit of difference... something like this happens.

A few weeks ago Creative Nectar had a combined workshop with Sumya Anani. The morning began with yoga at Sumya's yoga studio, Learning To Fly. The afternoon was process painting. I had the afternoon off and was able to paint while Jenny facilitated. I was painting. It was great. Also, I was in some serious pain. I had been dealing with chronic pain for a year and a half and that day I think it was as bad as it had ever been. Still, I painted.

I was painting the face of a green man with a snake wrapped around his head. I didn't know where it was going and I didn't care. I just wanted to be there with the paint and paper because it was keeping the pain in the background. However, by the time I started painting the green man's neck, I was in a great deal of discomfort. My neck literally felt on fire and that familiar feeling of hopelessness crept up from behind me and took over. I decided to paint the pain in bold, red streaks. A large black dot wanted to appear in the middle of the figure's neck so I painted that.

 After painting the black dot I took a break. I went into the bathroom and just sat on the toilet feeling like I was losing some sort of fight with my body. I literally asked in a hushed and desperate voice to whoever was listening, "Why is this happening and why won't it go away!?" The answer came in an instant and was as powerful as a bolt of lightning.

 I suddenly knew with every fiber of my being that my body was responding to 43 years of severe verbal abuse. An image of a dog being kicked came into my mind. If you kick a dog too many times he will finally bite back. My body was biting back. Tears took over as I realized just how demanding and relentless I had been about body size and weight all my life. Years of looking down at my little belly with disgust...sometimes going so far as to give it a disdainful little slap. Memories flooded my awareness. Memories of how I'd starve myself in high school and even before in grade school. Memories of shame because I wore bigger sizes than most as a preteen. And memories of a life being on one diet or another just like my mom had been. So there I was....crying on the toilet, apologizing to my beautiful body. Letting her know I understood the pain and that the abuse ended then and there. I kissed my thighs and gave my belly a big hug. I wiped my tears and returned to my painting.

 I felt lighter....free from trying to shape my body into something it wasn't. Happier because that idea of perfection had melted away.And although the pain wasn't gone, it wasn't as intense. I had made peace with my body. The war I had been waging internally was over. It was the end of an awful era.
 What I realised that day was no matter what amazingly good stuff I chose to put into my body, or how many walks I took each day didn't matter if my internal dialog was one of constant shame and belittlement directed towards my body. The beautiful body that had done an amazing job getting me where I needed to go for 43 years; an incredible miracle, had  been rewarded by my focusing only on what I perceived as ugly flaws.

 Once again,painting had cleared the way for me to strip another layer of myself away and uncover a dark truth that found it's way into the light and shone as gold. Alchemy!

Friday, June 29, 2012

Acoustic Summer Nights


Join us the evening of Thursday July 12th from 7:30-9:30, as Creative Nectar Studio begins a series of acoustic concert nights this summer! Our first musician, Victor James Dougherty, combines years of guitar and vocal performance with soulful lyrics to create memorable songs that inspire and transform. This intimate, house concert-like setting promises to deliver a magical night of conscious music and candlelight.

www.victorjamesdougherty.com

$5 suggested love offering/feel free to bring your own refreshments. Please RSVP to reserve your spot as seating is limited. creativenectar@hotmail.com

Monday, June 25, 2012

Relaxing Into Summer

"Each fairy breath of summer, as it blows with loveliness, inspires the blushing rose."  ~Author Unknown


It's summertime! The days are long and warm and the hectic pace of life seems to be slowing down a bit as we ease into the dog days of summer. At the same time, we have much to offer you at the studio this month and beyond... 

Please take a look at our painting schedule on the calendar to the right, as well as our new "Beyond The Brush" events which include an evening of acoustic music by Victor James Dougherty on Thurs, July 12th and another chance to check out Mission's Art Walk and our open studios on Fri, July 13th. We hope you will join us for opportunities to be renewed, inspired and to live juicy!

Here's to enjoying summer's warm embrace and slower pace :)

Tuesday, June 19, 2012

Getting Curious

Getting Curious: An Introduction To Process Painting
Saturday June 23rd 10am - 12:30pm ($15)


Have you been curious about process painting and would like to find out more? If you have never painted with us before and want to give it a try, we are offering this introduction at the discounted rate of $15! No art experience necessary and all materials provided. Call us or shoot us an e-mail if you would like to register: creativenectar@hotmail.com / 816.550.6728

Tuesday, May 15, 2012

Learning To Fly (aka: Kicked Out Of The Nest)



I thought my life was so together. Things were finally feeling like they were where they needed to be...even feeling a  bit "secure" and then BOOM, a lot of very important things I believed to be true were completely demolished!  Here I am, feeling as if I am being asked to leave the safety of the nest and learn to fly. Only wait a minute, didn't I JUST do this?  I quit my secure day job of 10 years 9 short months ago! Hadn't I said "yes" to the deep yearning and need inside of me to help create this studio? Surely that was my big "leaving the nest" moment. Apparently this was just act one.

In act two it feels like the Universe is giving me a very big nudge out of my safety zone. From what I can tell I am being asked to finally come out of my shell and be truly authentic and no longer play it safe or small. I am being asked to do stuff on my own and make decisions based on what I feel is right not because of how it might look to a certain few; maybe to even make stuff up as I go along. It is time for me to truly find my own voice and live from that strong place that lies deep within all of us but is very seldom trusted.

This is how it with process painting. This is what is slowly being cultivated inside of me each time I meet my painting. It is a trusting of what wants to be created even when it doesn't make sense or looks terrible in that moment. Painting asks me to go with it anyway and leave the security of my analytical mind. What I am only now discovering after 15 years of practice, is that there are still several layers in me that are  being unearthed. Nine months ago when I quit my job, I felt like I was 100% authentic and honest with myself and that I had finally "arrived". I thought the strong and true inner me was taking over and that was that. What I realize now is yes, that was a bit of her, but this excavation is a process...it takes time. It is an ever-evolving understanding with myself that informs the next step. The more I practice present moment awareness through painting, the deeper I go.

So, what have I been shown lately? Nothing much. Just that I have had the voices of important others guiding my actions. Voices that have been so integrated and so subtle that they have passed as my own  for far too long. And now the Universe sees that I am ready for more even though I don't feel it or trust it. Well, maybe I do. But it is really scary! This time I don't risk just being out of a job.This time the risk is on a much deeper level and includes people not liking the real me, the one  who wants to step out of the shadows and run the show. This time I risk possible failure at the one thing I truly believe in - creating a safe home for the painting process.

When we paint in the studio it is a safe environment. There is no judgement about what or how we create. No comments are allowed and we paint in the silence. It is secure and supportive and designed this way so that we feel safe to let  things come out that we wouldn't normally risk showing in our daily lives. It is a place to build courage. But now I believe I am being asked to do this ALL the time. The last week or so has shown me it is time for me to share my own voice and trust my inner guidance. It is time for me to leave the nest and learn to fly...again. Only this time when I land I will be in the nest I built and on my own.



Join us for a special upcoming retreat combining process painting and restorative yoga: 
Restore Your Soul & Learn to Fly: A Daylong Retreat
Saturday, June 16, 2012
10:30 am - 4:30 pm
View more details...

Thursday, March 29, 2012

How Do We Fool Ourselves?


April Fools! We all know a prankster or two in our lives who loves nothing more than to "get us good" at least once this time of year, or maybe you are that trickster. No matter who it is playing the prank, April Fool's Day is a wonderful time to celebrate laughter and surprise.

Of course, it did get us thinking ... Sitting around the table at the studio with fellow painters, a conversation about April fools quickly turned into a full on heart-to-heart about how we can fool ourselves. We realized this juicy query of how we trick ourselves wanted to be explored further.

Ask yourself ... Are you living a lie for someone else? Are you telling yourself that you can't do something? Or that you need to look a certain way? Or that you need a special-something or -someone to be happy? Have you said "no" to something big? Is the job you're in what you want or what others wanted for you? What would you do today if there were no consequences?

Perhaps an occasional dive into the deep inner landscape is just what we need to trick our own inner fool.



Going Deeper:

This month on April 14th we will host a day-long workshop of painting, restorative sound with Karen Folgarelli and a writing exercise that will help us to uncover the ways of the trickster mind. It promises to be a fun and revealing day, working side by side with our inner fool!

Find out more...

Monday, March 26, 2012

A Revealing Conversation


We were recently interviewed by the fabulous Rev. Heidi Alfrey on the Unity Online Radio show Let's Get Naked: Revealing Our Authentic Selves, and how perfect when we're talking about painting for process and finding our authenticity?

In case you missed the original broadcast "Notice the Nectar and Let Life Be Juicy!" on March 19, 2012, we invite you to take a listen to our scrumptious conversation about painting and life...

Listen Now >

Monday, March 12, 2012

Meeting Our Judge


Why is it that sometimes painting for process feels less flowing and more like a difficult task? Often fueling those less-pleasant experiences is a pesky little voice hiding out in the back of our heads. You may know the voice ... It says things like "That looks terrible. You're not an artist--What do you think you're doing?!?" It tears us apart with hateful words that we would probably never unleash on another person, and yet the voice incessantly fills our minds. And what's worse--we sometimes BELIEVE it.

One of the seeming-miracles process painting is that we get to glimpse an insight that can forever change our lives. Like practicing meditation, we can gain awareness of the subtle voices we carry around with us, and with attention we notice them, label them, and then do something extraordinary ... we let them be. In other words, we don't buy into what they're saying. We don't let the voice of limitation win anymore.

Sometimes it's helpful to imagine what this judging voice would looks like if it took a physical form, and then invite it into your painting. It may look like a monster, or a strict parent, or a religious figure, or it may even look like a ridiculous frog trying so hard to taunt you! Often times when we bring it visually into the painting, the voice subsides or disappears altogether.

Where does this judging mind come from? It's helpful to remember that we develop internal voices as survival mechanisms. These voices, as nasty as they may be, are actually trying to protect us. Rather than meeting outer harm and criticism, we attempt to judge ourselves first. It probably developed as a strategy from a very early age. But the question is: Is it still serving us now?

We invite you to notice the next time your inner commentary is rattling off and to ask yourself with curiosity "Who is this speaking?" What does it look like? Is it a clown, or a frog, or maybe a parent? See what happens when you bring compassion to that voice, and at the same time respectfully decline to buy into its story. You might find yourself surprised by the outcome.



Sunday, February 26, 2012

Letting Go To Make Space For The New


Something about Spring enlivens us with a feeling of unlimited potential and a sense of expansiveness. Each year this expansiveness encourages us to ready our garden by breaking up soil and planting seeds that will produce the bounty of Autumn's harvest. We've been mulling things over all Winter long, deciding what to plant in this Springs bed. We've had many months indoors to figure out what didn't work last year and what new things to try this time around.

Just as we are led to prepare our garden's soil each year, so too is the subtle urge deep inside us to make room for what wants to be born from within. Our interior garden's earth must be tilled in order for new ideas and dreams to emerge. Sometimes the old needs to be shaken up a bit in order for the new and fertile ground waiting below to have its chance.

Spring arrives in a few short weeks and the studio will be throwing her own garden party. The second Saturday in March will be dedicated to tilling our inner garden with a day-long workshop of process painting, writing and healing sounds geared toward letting go of what no longer nourishes us, in order to make way for the new.

Are you ready to let go of that which holds you back so that you can receive even more? Perhaps the invitation to "play in the dirt" resonates with you. When you clear the way for the new, unlimited possibilities exist. Let's paint!

Letting Go: A Daylong Workshop for Release
Saturday March 10th
10am - 4:30pm
$80 Includes all materials

We will use painting for process - a tool for expression without technique or judgement - along with journaling to explore and reconnect with our truest nature. Special guest Karen Folgarelli will treat us during the afternoon session with vibrational sound therapy using zither harps which cleanse, uplift and de-stress with the frequencies of restoration. You will feel expansively renewed in this warm and welcoming space!

Say "yes" to you! Space is limited to 10 participants. Sign up is required before March 8th
To reserve your spot call :
816-550-6728  or email creativenectar@hotmail.com 

Saturday, February 18, 2012

With Or Without Paper

This week I received some rather rattling medical news and although the biospy results are not back yet,it is possible a lesion on my arm was a form of skin cancer. Most of my life this sort of information would only have been shared with a few close friends and family... but I am changing. I know that more than ever the painting process is helping me to navigate through deep,strange waters and I want to share this with as many people as possible. I want to share because I know how this process is impacting my life and maybe it could help someone else too.

Lately, it would seem, I have been repeatedly asked to sit with not knowing what something is, where it is going and seriously NOT liking how that feels. How funny (?) that this is EXACTLY what is happening in my current painting. The images coming this time have felt murky and heavy. They are less familiar to me and so there is a feeling of discomfort whenever I disengage from the process. It has been a great challenge just to show up in front of the painting and be with what wants to come. I would much rather tear it off the wall and start something new and familiar. But I don't. I stay. I feel and I paint. The times I am fully engaged in painting and choose to breathe with the moment and the color connecting from brush to paper are what keep me coming back. And these moments are what get me through not knowing what is going to happen next in my life when I'm not painting.

Sitting in the exam room at the doctor's office,I remember the studio and how it feels to be fully present in my painting with the sun shining through the window and the feel of the brush in my hand. I understand again that life can be like a painting. I may not know where it is leading or even what it is. The images may be unfamiliar and scary to me and that's ok. I notice everything in the moment and decide to practice not getting caught up in thoughts about things that haven't even happened yet. I take a deep breath and notice as I exhale.

This process has helped me through the toughest times of my life. Painting has taught me how to stay and remain present through my mother's five year fight with Alzheimer's disease and my father's rapid death from cancer. There were times I would worry about the next step of the disease with my parents wondering if I would be able to make it without crumbling. When I chose to be present with what was unfolding, miracles happened. Laughing with my father as we all sat on his bed the night of my birthday 4 days before he died, I chose to be present. I found true joy in our conversation and realized maybe for the first time how brillant and blue his eyes were.

There is a sweetness that happens when you let go and surrender to what is. I know for a fact without painting in my life I would have missed  some of the most important moments with my parents in their final weeks and years. Painting has given me a tool I can use with or without paper. Painting has taught me courage and peace in present moment awareness.

Monday, January 30, 2012

Falling in Love With Yourself


As we approach the Valentine's season, some questions we'd like to ask you are: Do you remember what brings you joy? Do you know what wholeness feels like?

The Valentine's holiday has become so commercialized and can also feel so yucky if you're not involved in a romantic relationship. But there's another kind of "love" that does not involve buying things or seeking a special someone who fills the missing pieces of our lives. We're referring to the Love that is true and eternal, that we experience when we return to ourselves and discover our true nature. That Love is not dependent on other people or outer circumstances; it is the natural joy that arises when we are fully present to ourselves and our present-moment experiences.

We invite you to say "yes" to you and carve out a little time this month to give back to yourself. In fact, we've planned a daylong retreat Saturday, Feb. 11, 2012 to help you feel pampered as you nurture, restore and unlock your creativity.

We will use process painting along with journaling to explore and reconnect with our essence. And special guest Karen Folgarelli will treat us during the afternoon with vibrational sound therapy using zither harps, which cleanse, uplift and de-stress with the frequencies of restoration. You will feel renewed and inspired in this warm and welcoming space.

Whatever your plans involve in the coming weeks, we hope they include something that nourishes your heart and soul and brings you the joy that lasts. When you fall in love with yourself, you fall in love with the world!

Namasté,
Jen & Steph


Falling in Love With Yourself
A Day-long Retreat at Creative Nectar Studio
Saturday, February 11, 2012
10 am-4:30 pm
$80
More information at our Facebook event page.
Email us at creativenectar@hotmail.com to reserve your spot (Sign-up required by Feb 9th. Limited to 10 participants.)

Saturday, January 21, 2012

Your Brain on Creativity


Let me start by saying that I'm no neuroscientist. I am an artist and workshop facilitator. I have spent countless hours immersed in the creative process. Still, I am absolutely fascinated by the ways engaging the creative process seeps out to affect other areas of our lives. Specifically how painting-for-process--as a mindfulness practice--can bring integration and clarity into our day-to-day routines, relationships, jobs and lives.

What is unique about this practice--as compared to "art" in general--is that we are creating not for product or a desired outcome, but for the discovery itself and self-awareness it brings. And no matter how difficult it is to still our minds or quiet our inner critics, the place we often arrive at after a process painting session is an integrated state. A coherence of body, mind, emotions, thoughts, etc, that brings a peaceful clarity and sense of unity of self.

What are some of the qualities we develop from process painting that can benefit our lives?
  • An Open, Receptive Mind
    The practice of painting for process helps us soften our mental labels and develop a sense of curiosity toward life and whatever is unfolding before us. The Zen Buddhists refer to this as "beginner's mind"--or having an attitude of openness, eagerness and a lack of preconceptions when studying a subject. We open ourselves to unlimited possibilities when we learn to let go of our judgements. This is an invaluable skill when it comes to thinking "outside the box" to solve problems in daily life.

  • Living "In the Zone"
    When we paint mindfully, we are painting with our whole being. This means surrendering to the process wholly and allowing it to move through us, rather than allowing our brains to command tasks of our hands and bodies. At the same time, when we are engaged in an activity wholeheartedly while immersed in a focused concentration, we set up the conditions to live "in the zone" or "flow", as described by flow psychology. This is the timeless and blissful state of total efficiency and integration, and can be experienced in any area of our lives (whether we are painting, playing a sport, completing a task at work, doing the dishes, etc...)

  • Reduced Stress/Increased Joy
    These are natural by-products of the process when we discover that there are no mistakes, that we can trust our own process, and that we can accept ourselves and others just as we've shown up. An inner joy arises when we make the shift from black & white judgments to "full-spectrum" thinking, and when our inner creative child--unconditioned by our culture's biases and limitations-- can come out and play.
I invite you to give process painting a try if you are looking for ways to dissolve blocks, expand your awareness and create from the inside out. And you just might find that possibilities open in other, seemingly "non-related" areas of your life.

Live your creativity,
Jenny



Tuesday, January 17, 2012

Painting is My Greatest Teacher

*This is an eleven year old journal entry about painting and expectations. Unfortunately, those pesky expectations still follow me around on a daily basis. The good news is I don't hang on to them as long as I did back then. Painting really is teaching me how to live.





"Painting is teaching me how to live." I can still remember hearing those words from a fellow painter over a year ago and now I was writing them in my journal feeling, as she must have felt, grateful and in awe of the process. As I write I realize painting is the only work I can do that transitions naturally from the page out into my daily life.I've read tons of books. I've meditated and chanted and gone to a lecture here and there. But painting allows me to face myself and my choices each time I put paint to paper.

The other night as I began to work on a painting that had been unfolding for several months, a beautiful woman began to emerge effortlessly from a pink and powerful flower. She was silver and fuchsia with black outlines. I was there for her with every paint stroke, providing the muscle and love needed to create her.It was a smooth and pleasurable experience. The genuine joy I experienced that night was unmatched and I was genuinely sad to leave her.

I didn't paint for a few days and began to miss the warm connection the fuchsia woman and i had shared.I was excited to see her again! When I was able to paint again I got right to it knowing she must have been missing me as much as I missed her. As I began to paint I could tell immediately something wasn't right. Things felt awkward and forced. I was expecting a repeat performance of the other night and she wasn't cooperating. Where was my joyful bliss-filled connection? It would seem my joy had been replaced by an ugly cold shoulder, a blatant refusal to bend to my direction and do as I expected. All I wanted was to give her a beautiful face and it wasn't working. In fact, the harder I pushed the more contorted her features became. I simply could not accept the fact that her face wasn't going to look the way I wanted and it hurt me to look at her misshapen features.

Why was it so important to me that she appear beautiful? Was it easier for me to deal with a beautiful face? I had expected our time together to mirror our last meeting and when that didn't happen I clung to the idea that I could change her and the moment to give me what I wanted. I pushed and pulled against the current that night, trying to make the situation feel good.It never occurred to me that I could accept what was happening and just go with it... maybe even get a little curious about what the situation had to offer. That night, instead of being present for what wanted to show up, I made the choice to try to fix things and focus on all that I perceived to be "wrong" with my painting.

Later I realized this was how I was choosing to live my life. I was constantly attaching certain expectations to everything and everyone. It was starting to dawn on me that by creating these expectations I was setting myself up for all sorts of disappointments. Admittedly this was not a foreign concept to me. Reading all my books and going to my various lectures and workshops had allowed me to visit and revisit the idea of living without expectations. But that night, nose to nose with my painting, I felt it. For the first time I truly took it in and understood that I was the one who was making it so hard. I was choosing to struggle when I could just let go.

Wednesday, January 11, 2012

New Year/New You

January marks the begining of a new year and the chance to start fresh. When we sit down with pen and paper to come up with a list of resolutions for the coming year, often the plans include losing weight or "getting into shape", making more money or starting a new relationship. But how often do we include "self care" as a resolution? So many of us are too busy helping others--or trying to lose those extra pounds--that we forget an important truth: Getting to know our true self and finding our center (if only for a few hours a month) will help all else fall into place.

This month and all year long we invite you to take some time for you.
Peace and love in the new year!
Jen and Steph