and here’s this week:

This week is all about Home Depot and building our projects and doing some art with mommy. I loved all the photos so I didn’t want to pick and choose. Sometimes it’s just one or two stories and I am totally okay with that.
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 was listening to Tara Brach this morning in the car and she tells the story of this girl who is mixing paints and discovers for the first time that if she mixes blue and yellow, it becomes green. She’s so excited about this that when her Dad comes home, she wants to share it with him. But when he comes home, he’s still working on a deal and he’s on the phone and busy. She follows him around saying “dad, dad” but he’s busy. Eventually, as he walks into his office, she’s still there, following him so he turns around and says, “What are you doing down there?” And she says “Daddy, I live down here.”
Tara then goes on to talk about feeling heard and feeling like people notice you and care about what you say, etc.
This was not the first time I heard the story. I like to listen to all of Tara’s podcasts and she tends to repeat stories occasionally when they fit the topic of discussion. Even though it wasn’t my first time, the story stayed with me longer than usual this time around.
It made me think about my life and the way I treat my kids. The way they might or might not feel heard/noticed at times. And what I could do about it.
I feel like one of my core issues in life is my lack of a sense of belonging. Somewhere along the line I decided I didn’t belong and I just can’t seem to discard that notion easily. Even in situations I excelled, I have a nagging feeling of not belonging, this constant wait for the other shoe to drop. I am not sure if it comes from this feeling of “not being heard” but I do think that if a kid feels like s/he is heard and his/her words matter, it certainly strengthens the notion of belonging.
Maybe I am not right but I’m thinking about it and trying to see if feeling heard might affect sense of belonging.
The fact is, I am not a stay-at-home mom and I am not able to give all of my minutes to my kids. And, honestly, I don’t think feeling sad about it will help so I am trying to be realistic. I have a job which gives my kids other opportunities that are also important in their lives. I have hobbies, friends, personal growth ventures, etc. all of which take time away from my kids. And I don’t necessarily think the answer is to do away with those.
But then, I am trying to figure out what the answer is. One thing I try to do is make the most of the opportunities we do have together. On the way to and from school, I make sure to listen to my kids instead of being busy doing anything else (well, except driving!) I make sure to spend time with them each morning and each night. I always ask about their day, we have our gratitude conversations, our projects, our celebrations, etc etc. But I was thinking today that I’d like to do more. I’d like to schedule some time each day for each of my kids to talk to me about whatever they want. Some amount of time where I am completely, uninterruptedly theirs.
This is easier with Nathaniel since he spends more hours at home. With David, I will have to carve time. He and I spend very little time without Nathaniel and most of it is spent on homework, learning, or other growth activities. He doesn’t get time to just freely share with me each day for more than 10mins or so. The rest of the sharing is interrupted by work, Nathaniel, dinner, homework, whatever.
So I am trying to find a way to make my kids feel more heard. It starts with them but, of course, I want to do it with everyone in my life. With Jake. with my friends. With people I encounter. I want to be able to be 100% present when I am with them, no matter who. So it shows that they matter and what they say matters. That they belong in this space with me at this moment.
I don’t know if it will instill more belonging. I don’t even know if I can do it consistently. But I know that I want to. And since they are both home all week next week, I am going to give it a genuine try. Let’s see if it works.
If you have a strong sense of being heard and/or belonging, I’d love to hear what makes you feel that way. What I could try with my own kids. And maybe even myself.
Here’s this week’s card:

It says: the best thing you can have is a true friend.
This card uses the Layered Butterflies and Stripes templates by Julie Fei-Fan Balzer for The Crafter’s Workshop (as well as a few others.) and Tombow markers.
Gratitude PostCards is a weekly project for 2013. You can see a detailed post on my goal and the postcards I use here.
False Memory is another book where a girl wakes up, no memory of who she is, etc. She then finds out she’s part of this team for a special project, blah blah.
You’ve heard it before.
But, just like the others, it’s fun. It’s fast. It’s enjoyable. I am glad I read it.
There are so many books like this now, but I like them so I keep reading them. If you like these kinds, too, I recommend it.

I was talking to a client this morning and I heard myself tell her that she can look at everything in her life as a choice point. After I hung up, I thought to myself that, obviously, this is true for me, too. (True for all of us.)
We all have our own list of what’s not a choice. But, for me, with the exception of my two children, every single thing I do (or don’t do) is a choice. I exclude my kids because they are still too young to take care of themselves and while it’s true that I have the choice to leave their care to someone else or to choose to not care, I feel like since I chose to bring them into this world, and they’re not old enough to self-sustain yet, it’s my responsibility to get them to a self-sustaining state. And, I admit that this is my personal thing and I can see others defining even this as a choice point.
But everything else is unquestionably a choice in my life. Even being a wife. I am choosing to spend my day with this person. I am choosing to stay married. I am choosing to share my life with him. I have other choices.
I am choosing the job I do. It might not seem like a choice but it is. There are many ways to make money and I am choosing this one. It might not seem like I have other options but I do. I could work at a Starbucks, a McDonalds, etc. There are many places that would hire me where I could still make money. Enough to make sure I get to eat. But I choose this job. I choose it for its ups and downs. But I do have other choices (as non-obvious as they might seem.)
I am choosing to spend my time the way I do. I am choosing to do the coaching. I am choosing to wake up at 4:30am once a week to attend the certification calls. I am choosing to fill my free moments with clients. I am choosing to do art. I am choosing to sketch. I am choosing to read. To eat well and to eat badly. To exercise. To not exercise enough. To sleep. To not call a friend I’ve been meaning to call. To not return an email I keep thinking about returning.
All of these things I do or don’t do, things I say or don’t say are choices in my life. I might not be making them consciously, but I am making them. And here’s the crucial part of why this matters:
I hold the power to make other choices.
When we don’t think of events/things/people in our lives as choices, we become the victim in our life. Things are happening “to” us and we’re not doing them. But this is rarely true. (I will relent that there are some rare exceptions, but they are much more rare than one might think.) And when we’re victims, we lose all the power over our own lives. This kind of life is no better than an enslaved one where you don’t actually have choice.
There’s a famous quote about how a man who chooses not to read is no better than a man who cannot read. I think choice is like that. If you choose to be a victim, you’re no better off than a person who actually is a victim.
The one thing we all want is to have power over our own lives. Even little babies want this control apparently. (there are specific scientific studies on this.) So realizing that every minute of our life is a choice point is very very empowering. The first step is always getting conscious of it. Being aware.
Because it is only when you’re aware that you can start making changes.
If you so choose.
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 (not my favorites this time):
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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.
Here’s this week’s gratitudes and celebrations:
Before:

and here’s what the page looks like with all the gratitudes and celebrations:

There we go. 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.
Here’s his next page. He was grateful that he’s been watching daddy play plants vs. zombies.

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.

Lots of photos this time. Here are some snapshots from our week:
The boys were playing in the alley behind our house so I visited them to take some photos.

throwing balls with daddy.

i love how much of their personality shines in the photos.

and how much it makes my heart swell with love.

my boy has gotten so big and it makes me sad how quickly time passes.

thankfully i have a little one, too.

who is always happy to pose for me (see how the hand is on the waist, love that!)

so is his big brother!

little boy’s learning to throw.

pretty good, so far!

look how tall he is! doesn’t look like a kid anymore.

the next day, we went to home depot. normally Jake’s the one who takes them but I tagged along to take photos.

nathaniel hadn’t had a chance to eat so he munched.

while the big boys worked.

then we got to work, too.

David really enjoys these sessions.

Nathaniel never misses an opportunity to laugh.

and here are our Valentine’s card holders.

then they visit the sheds in the parking lot.

David’s favorite thing to do.

yesterday was David’s birthday, I woke him up with a cupcake and a candle. we then went out to breakfast and dropped him off to school.

we then went back to his class to celebrate with the whole class.

after school, he wanted to go to a ceramic-painting place.

he picked a transformer.

we finished it and then signed the date on the bottom.

there’s our final product before it’s in the kiln.

then we went to dinner together and he got to open his presents. He was so grateful and happy. He’s such a sweet, good kid.

and then it was family photo time.

much laughter again, as always.

i don’t even try to be serious anymore.

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: open your heart to possibilities. let it all in.
sold – thank you
SixBySix is a weekly project for 2013. You can see a detailed post on my goal and other details here.
and here’s this week:

This week is all about our little trip to Tahoe. The kids learned to ice skate for the first time. We also went tubing, cross country skiing, and show-shoeing all for the first time. it was an awesome two days.
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.
It’s been a long day here and I’m quite tired and still have more commitments for the evening so I decided I’ll share my One Little Word for February with you instead. I’ll add some thoughts along with it so it’s more meaningful.
This month’s assignment was to create a vision board. I made one of these in 2011 for Karen’s class. I’m not a vision-board kind of person. Not sure why and not sure what that even means. But I just know that I don’t do them each year. So when I first watched the assignment I was all blah about it.
But I am a good student and I wanted to do my homework anyway. I knew from my experience before that I would do it digitally and have it available to add to my moleskines as well as my OLW binder.
So I opened up Pinterest and typed “present moment” into the search. I found a ton of boards, went through a whole bunch of them, tagged photos I liked, and then opened all of them in photoshop and just dragged and dropped, and moved and shuffled until I was happy with what I got. I tried to fit in as much as I could. I ended up with this:

I will admit that I love it. It has so much of what resonates with me right now. Last time, I’d deliberately added some images that were important to me, but this time I just pulled whatever spoke to me without any rhyme or reason.
My favorite part is the pooh conversation.
But I really love all of it. I love the peace, serenity, love, joy I see in it. It has so much of what’s meaningful for me and I know I could have spent another 50 hours on it but I love it just as it is.
and here it is in my olw binder:

If you did this, too, I’d love to see yours!
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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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