An Artistic Daily Devotional

An Artistic Daily Devotional

Sometimes just before I close my eyes to meditate I read some kind of daily devotional or choose a card from an oracle or tarot deck.  Lately it has been this deck.
I first saw it in a museum in Nice, France but at that point we were two and a half months into a three month trip and I couldn’t fit one more thing into my baggage.  And then, of course, it was available on Amazon when I got back home.
The deck is called Art Oracles, written by Katya Tylevich and Illustrated by Mikkel Sommer and has 50 cards featuring a variety of artists.  The written inscriptions on each card aren’t quotes from the artist, but ideas inspired by them.
One of my current favorites, though it is hard to choose
Charles and Ray Eames
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Design your days – don’t plan them
Aspire to profound practicality
Be unbending in your flexibility
And yes, I am trained to read tarot, but this isn’t about that, that’s for another day.
I’ve Been Smelling Lilacs

I’ve Been Smelling Lilacs

I’ve been away from Chicago quite a bit lately, weeks and even months at a time, but this beautiful spring I’m adventuring locally.
Lilacs are a great childhood memory for me , something I really missed all those years living down south.  This year they are everywhere, and the sight and smell gives me a glimmer even on the grimmest days.
A Real Magazine

A Real Magazine

Did you know it is actually still possibly to get a magazine without ads?  An honest to God, really high quality magazine.  This one is the brainchild and love offering of Janine Vangool, a Canadian writer and publisher.
Each themed issue features artists and makers, their work, their processes, their stories.  Even if you don’t think you have a creative bone in your body, it’s juicy fun.
She’s also a publisher, with an on going themed series she calls the Encyclopedia of Inspiration, now numbering 12 volumes.  Yes, I have them all.
If this sounds great, I’ll warn you a subscription isn’t cheap but it is so well worth it, not just for the content but for the idea that you are supporting an artisan, really, whose art is under great pressure and would be a shame to lose.
Consider a subscription a gift to yourself or someone who loves all things human-made (not an affiliate, just a fan).  The image is a link
Meditation and the Pink Moon

Meditation and the Pink Moon

I’ve always been as drawn to a full moon as the next person, but following the cycles of nature just hasn’t come “naturally” to me.
So this month, the only reason I knew there was a think called the Pink Moon or Strawberry Moon was that a local spa was using it as the theme for a special meditation event.  (More on that another time)
Whether you celebrate it at a fancy spa, or at home in your jammies, one school of spiritual thought says this moon celebrates the arrival of spring and it’s new beginnings and renewals.  To welcome and make room for those new beginnings, it’s also the time to soften, to let go, to release whatever has hardened inside you or is difficult to forgive. I have some work to do, how about you?
A Modern Road Trip

A Modern Road Trip

Whatever your opinion is about climate change, apparently this is what a modern late winter/early spring road trip looks like.
Ed and I set off on our drive trip back from Southern California to Chicago in mid-March.   I always keep an eye on the weather forecast because we have several route options, and one day I hope the “northern” route though Colorado will be clear enough by that time or year.
No such luck.  In fact the “southern” route wasn’t looking too good either.  Happily, we delayed our departure, lured by an offer to stay another day in the sunshine by the pool at 50% off.  Good thing too, because the day we would have been going through West Texas there was a dust storm, fire, and very bad truck accident along the interstate.
I was feeling pretty good about my planning, I have to admit.  What followed, though, was four days of driving Apple Maps routes that were full of those red symbols – fire, wind, winter storm, hail, tornado.  And that’s not counting the construction zones and phantom traffic jams for no reason at all.
Fortunately for us, we ran ahead of most of the drama – a windstorm across I-40 a couple of hours in our rear view, a tornado 45 minutes after we passed through.
So did that technology and all of the red exclamation points help us avoid the worst of it or just jangle the nervous system?  I think our little household has agreed to disagree on that one.