Here’s this week’s card:

It says: be careful for the seasons of your life. savor them.
This card uses a template from The Crafter’s Workshop (as well as a few others.) and acrylic paint.
Gratitude PostCards is a weekly project for 2013. You can see a detailed post on my goal and the postcards I use here.

As I was taling to a client a few weeks ago, we drew the distinction between liking something, being good at something, and being fulfilled by something. I think sometimes we collapse all these different things and, in my opinion, while certain activities might fall into all of these categories, they are each distinct categories. And I think differentiating them is important and valuable.
There are things that I am good at, like fixing computer problems, that I used to maybe like but I don’t as much anymore and I, similarly, don’t feel fulfilled by as much anymore. There are also things that I am very fulfilled by but am not very good at just yet, like lettering or sketching. There are things that I like but am not very fulfilled by like watching TV. And then there are things I like, am good at, and get fulfilled by, like reading or learning.
More and more, I am growing to realize that if an activity is not fulfilling, that means I cannot sustain it. Something that I like eventually wanes over time. Or it might morph. For example, I used to do a lot of layouts. For me, it was a way to tell our stories and I was getting a lot of fulfillment out of it. But lately, the savor project and the blog is covering a lot of that for me and I don’t feel compelled to create as many layouts as I used to. Maybe part of it was also finding my own style and playing with supplies and once it all settled down, there was less learning involved and I wasn’t as interested anymore. Not sure exactly what happened but I do know, at this moment, it’s less fulfilling than it used to be. (Even though I still like making pages and can be ‘good’ at it depending how you define being good at something like that.)
I think this is also why it’s important to remember the “purpose” or “value” behind the things we do. Sometimes the activity itself might not be as enjoyable but it’s so very fulfilling afterwards. Just like when you’re learning something new, the process can be slow-moving and painful and not always enjoyable. But then when you improve/learn, it’s so super-fulfilling to see that.
Often times, we’re focusing on what we’re good at or what we might like. But not as much what deeply fulfills us. What goes to the heart of our core values in the world. Learning is one of my core values. When I am learning (almost no matter what) I am deeply fulfilled. So is serving others. So when I am in a place where I am not learning at all and not serving in any way, it doesn’t matter if I am good at what I am doing, I am just not happy. I cannot sustain that job/activity.
This is important for me to know because when something ceases to sustain me, I can pay attention and see which values are not being met. Like with the layout example, maybe I am just not learning anymore. Or I don’t feel like the stories I am sharing serve me or my family any more. Or they are being served just as well elsewhere. If I decide I want to (or maybe have to in a job situation) continue doing such an activity, I can see how I can make it more fulfilling for myself. What can I infuse this with so I am honoring one of my values again?
For example, if I want to continue to make layouts and really feel the fulfillment again, I can add a new layer of learning into the process. This past weekend, I tried to do this by adding more painting to my layouts. I wanted to see how the two mediums would work. I know I love to paint/watercolor. How could I combine that love with my layouts. Now I am learning/playing/experimenting again. And while frustration might show up, so does fulfillment because I am honoring one of my values.
Realizing the difference between liking, being good at, and being fulfilled by has allowed me to revisit a lot of how I spend my time. I’ve categorized all I do during the day/week so I have a good sense of which group (or combination of groups) it falls into so that I know where my time goes and how much of it I spend doing things that are not fulfilling me. Think of fulfilling as giving you energy (not physical but soul energy) so doing more of those will allow me to actually have more space and more energy in my life. It’s definitely a direction in which I want to go.
It also allows me to notice what’s not fulfilling me at the moment and whether I want to (or can) let it go. And if not, how can I modify things around this activity so it’s honoring a value I have and it can start showing up on the fulfilling bucket, too.
As with everything else, I am trying to learn about myself, what works for me, what motivates me, and what makes me show up in the world at my best. Learning what fills my cup is another step in that journey.
My goal for 2013 is to make three sketches a week. If I make more, great. If I don’t, that’s ok. Trying to keep the pressure low while still encouraging myself to draw.
Here are the ones for this week :
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that’s it for this week.
Sketching is a weekly project for 2013. You can see a detailed post on my sketching journey here.

Before I met my husband, when I heard the phone ring, I’d jump to get it. It didn’t matter if I was doing something important or we were in the middle of talking, etc. If the phone was ringing, clearly it was important and needed to be answered, right?
Wrong.
One of the gifts Jake gave me was the realization that just because the phone is ringing, it doesn’t mean that I have to get it. It just means, this is a convenient time for the other person to call. But, before I pick up, it’s also important for me to think about whether it’s a convenient time for me. Sometimes it is, sometimes it is not. The point here is not that I should not get the phone, it’s that I should’t automatically get it. Just because it’s ringing, it doesn’t mean it has to be answered.
Yet another example of the importance of awareness. Of taking the one extra second to stop and decide instead of reacting. So I can respond and not react.
Even though I’ve gotten much better about the phone, I’ve noticed that I now have this problem with email. If someone emails me and I take more than one or two days to respond, I automatically apologize for the delay. Where’s the rule that email should be responded to within minutes? In the older days, we were used to having to wait for the mail to be delivered and then for the response to be delivered. So things took time. While the lack of this slow-response-time can be effective sometimes, it also means that we can go at a much higher pace. And the emails can build up and can get overwhelming quickly. I pretty much can spend half my day responding to email.
But is that the most effective use of my time? Is that the most important thing I could be doing?
Clearly not.
So the question I have on my mind today is: what’s a reasonable time to respond to an email? (Excluding those emails that genuinely are urgent which are far and few in between.)
From the time I receive it, how long can I sit on it before it becomes rude? Before the other person is offended? Before I genuinely have to apologize for the delay?
As I sat and thought about that today, I decided my personal threshold is between four days and a week. Assuming the person is not out of town or responding to some emergency, I feel a week is a reasonable time to wait for a reply before it’s “too long.” So it should be good enough for my responses, too.
I understand that this threshold might be different for each of us. It’s not even the number itself that matters to me. It’s just the acknowledgement that just because it’s there and someone sent me an email, I don’t have to actually respond right away. It might “feel” urgent but it’s not actually urgent. And, often times, it’s not even important. It can wait a few days. I can do my important items and then tackle my email as a batch instead of continually interrupting what I am doing to respond to incoming mail. (Especially since we now know multitasking messes up the brain.)
So that’s what I am going to try this week. I will remember that just like the phone, email does not need to be answered right away. If the email is not super-time-sensitive, it’s going to sit in my inbox. I will reserve some time every few days to sit and go through what’s in my inbox and respond.
Let’s see how it goes.
(What’s your threshold?)
Here’s this week’s gratitudes and celebrations:
Before:

it says: you are who you choose to be. no one gets to take that away from you. be you.
and here’s what the page looks like with all the gratitudes and celebrations:

Just another excuse to create art and remember the present that is my life.
Gratitude Journal is a weekly project for 2013. You can see a detailed post on my goal other details here.
this week’s gratitude is actually a card for his teacher.


there we go. more next time.
Nathaniel’s Gratitude Pages is a weekly project for 2013 with my almost four-year-old son. You can see a detailed post on my goal other details here.

Here are some snapshots from our week:
We went to Creativity Day in the city last weekend. I took a photo right before we got there.

it started with bubble fun!

Nathaniel was shy but david had a lot of fun.

then it was lego time.

all three boys played.

then David was in a robot-making class.

he focused.

he got frustrated.

but then it worked like a charm!

and he loved it.

there was more playing.

even some silly putty.

we also went to David’s school cause it was his sharing day.

and he talked about our trip to Tiburon.

then it was Dino day so we went back to his school.

this is a poem he wrote about his dinosaur.

a peek into the diorama.

and his report.

they also put on a play.

David knew I was taking photos.

then family photo time.

Nathaniel would not stop playing with his feet.

unless we tickled him.

and here we go. so grateful for my life. i hope your week was lovely, too.
Weekly Diary is a project for 2013. You can read more about it here.
Before this week’s art here’s the important reminder: Please remember, this is personal and hand-made and thus imperfect. If you want perfect art, do not buy mine. Also one more reminder that these are pretty small. 5.5inches by 5.5inches. That’s about 14×14 centimeters). You will just get the original piece of watercolor paper with my art and signature in the back. No mounting, no frame. I don’t want to misrepresent anything. I will put a paypal button under each (you can pay with credit card or paypal.) the button doesn’t update so you will have to click through to see if it’s sold out. I will try to update them as quickly as I can and remove the button if it’s gone, but just in case. Each piece will be $35. That’s US dollars. If you have questions please leave a comment and I will reply as fast as I can.
With that here’s this week’s art:

it reads: always choose the loving path.
sold thank you
SixBySix is a weekly project for 2013. You can see a detailed post on my goal and other details here.

Yesterday I read an article on how the trick to reaching your goals is creating a self-identity around them. Like, if you want to get in shape, you start small and run/walk/exercise each day a tiny amount until you feel like you’re “a person who exercises” and then getting in shape seems much more plausible for a “person who exercises.” And as I thought about this, it made sense to me.
Especially on the opposite side. Like, I’ve wanted to learn how to do really beautiful lettering for a long while but each time I think about it, the first thing that comes to my mind is “my handwriting sucks, I am a person whose handwriting sucks.” I feel like having bad handwriting is just who I am so for this person with bad handwriting, being able to create beautiful lettering seems unfeasible. Not accomplishable.
I used to feel that way about drawing too. I remember I said to myself “I can’t draw. I wish I could draw.” It was who I was: “a person who can’t draw.” But then I started. I copied others, I worked at it every single day. I tried different things. I copied from photos. I experimented. And I found my style. After years of trying. I stil have a long, long way to go before I become the kind of talented sketcher I hope to be. But the point is that now my identity has shifted, I am no longer “the person who can’t draw.” I am “someone who can draw.” It changes how I see myself in the world. It makes everything possible. And it gives me the self-empowerment to accomplish any goals I set around drawing.
(I did the same with exercise by the way. I went from “someone who never exercises” to “someone who exercises every single day.” with tiny tiny steps, i changed my identity on exercise.)
So I’ve been thinking about how I can do this for the other things on my list that I haven’t been paying able to accomplish. Things like lettering, doodling, sketching figures. What I need to find is small steps that are achievable and create enough momentum for me to shift the self-identity I have around these. So I can move from “a person who can’t” do them to “a person who can.”
I think this idea of shifting the way you see yourself in the world (about this topic) is really spot on. It’s what leaves the doors closed vs creating the space for you to soar. And I know that I don’t want to ever feel like any doors are closed in my life.
At least not unless it’s by choice.
and here’s this week:

This week is all about our trip to NASA Ames and the easter egg hunt and the hugging photo.
See you next week!
The Savor Project is a weekly project for 2013. You can see a detailed post on my goal and other details here.

I’ve made some changes in my life in the last few weeks that have had some expected and some unexpected impact so I thought I’d share them with you in case it helps in any way.
The first change I made was back in the beginning of March. I decided that I was going to quit refined sugar. There wasn’t a lot of build up to this change or some major purpose. I tried quitting all sugar for about four hours and it was a disaster but then I switched to refined sugar only and it’s been a breeze. I take a break for our date nights but other than that, I’ve pretty much avoided refined sugar.
The expected impact was possibly some more energy, maybe some weight loss, but it was really cause I wanted to do it and liked the idea of eating as little processed food as possible.
What I didn’t expect was how easy it would be and even more significantly how easily it made all the foods I was struggling with not a problem for me. For example, each time I went to Starbucks to get coffee, I’d find myself picking a pastry or a cakepop and going there had become agony for me cause I found myself constantly craving the food and then feeling bad about it, etc. But I still wanted to get my coffee and felt mad at myself for not being able to control my food cravings. Interestingly, since the day I decided to quit refined sugar, none of those pastries are an option for me anymore and this hasn’t bothered me one bit. I can now go to Starbucks, get my coffee and nothing else. I don’t even mind it one bit. This has meant less bad food for me and for my boys since they were asking for food when I got some, too.
I have no idea what caused this shift but I am very grateful for it.
The other change I made was at the beginning of last week. I have been meaning to go back to daily meditation for over six months now but it keeps falling off the todo list. Out of the blue, last week, I decided I’d start waking up at 5am every weekday so I could meditate and journal while my kids were still sleeping. I think maybe this was instigated by my desire to do the Life Planner but I am not sure… either way, I decided to do it and have been sticking to it every day since. (I was already getting up at 4:40 on Wednesdays for my coaching certification calls so now I just get up at 5am on Mondays, Tuesdays, Thursdays and Fridays, too.)
The expected outcome was that I would meditate and journal each morning. Both of which did happen. I actually even get to finish my daily running before the kids wake up, too.
The unexpected outcome was how much calmer and happier this makes my morning. By the time 6:30 rolls around, I have already meditated, journaled, exercised and showered. I am calm and awake and patient. The breakfast is ready. If my kids aren’t awake, I lovingly kiss them and feel the spaciousness of having time to get them ready for school. It’s been so seamless that I now have 45 mins after they wake up to do my daily sketching, too. This means my sketching gets done before I drop the kids off so when I come back home, I can start work right away. It’s made my whole week go more smoothly. I’m still amazed by the effect it’s had on my life.
So here we are. Sometimes one shift causes other, unexpected ones. So if there’s some change calling to you, I say take the step today; maybe you’ll be surprised by the unexpected impact like I’ve been.
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projects for twenty twenty-five
projects for twenty twenty-four
projects for twenty twenty-three
projects for twenty twenty-two
projects for twenty twenty-one
projects for twenty nineteen
projects for twenty eighteen
projects from twenty seventeen
monthly projects from previous years
some of my previous projects
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