The Savor Project 2013 – Week 2

and here’s this week:

I talk about Nathaniel goofing around, playing Blokus with the kids, going to the Palo Alto Jr. Museum, origami yoda, and being published in the art journaling magazine.

I have to admit I am loving the 8.5×11 size and single page format. love love love. I still haven’t found a way to fit my art but still thinking on it.

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.

Gratitude PostCards – Week 3

Here’s this week’s card:

It says: take time to stop and smell the flowers. you deserve it.

This card uses the Flower Garden template by Julie Fei-Fan Balzer for The Crafter’s Workshop (as well as a few others.).


Gratitude PostCards is a weekly project for 2013. You can see a detailed post on my goal and the postcards I use here.

A Book a Week – The Selection

I picked up The Selection because…actually I have no idea why.

I think I picked it cause I heard about it and the premise sounded interesting. I liked the cover, too. But it was mostly one of those “why not” situations.

And I am glad I did.

I enjoyed reading this book and swallowed it in one take.

The only bad part was the ending. I assume it’s cause the author knew there was more coming, but the story doesn’t really end. It sort of is like a “wait for the next part to see what happens” ending. Even if a book is a trilogy or 5-part or whatever, I like each part to be able to stand on its own. And I didn’t think this one did.

But I still liked it.

2013 Sketching – Week 3

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.

Gratitude Journal – Week 2

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.

Nathaniel’s Gratitude Pages – Intro and Week 1

Since I am doing a gratitude project with David, I wanted to do one with Nathaniel, too. I took an old sketchbook I had and we’re altering each page, using whatever supplies he wishes. He doesn’t fully understand the concept of gratitude yet but I know that practice will help. And, worst case, we get to do some art together.

These pages might look great, funny, weird. He’s only 3.5 after all.

With that, here’s his first page. He used a spray with my help on this one. The next one is a bit less pretty. Gaby is his 3rd grade buddy at school.

there we go. more next time.

Weekly Diary – January 12 2013

This week’s been low on photos. Here are some snapshots from our week:

My beautiful son.

The little boy is taking a “nap”

putting shoes on (we still have our christmas decorations)

Jake took them to the playground.

nathaniel went to a birthday party.

and we celebrated our week (our new weekly tradition!).

nathaniel wasn’t into taking photos this week.

he just wouldn’t play along

so we decided to tickle.

and it so worked!

look at David trying so hard not to laugh. i love my family so much.

and here we go. i hope your week was lovely, too.


Weekly Diary is a project for 2013. You can read more about it here.

SixBySix – Week 2

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: take time to capture the good moments of your life so you can live them again and again.

sold thank you


SixBySix is a weekly project for 2013. You can see a detailed post on my goal other details here.

Celebrating A Milestone

I had the honor of being published in the winter issue of Somerset Art Journaling Magazine.

Here are some photos from my article.

I cannot tell you how delighted, honored and grateful I am. A true dream come true.

Thank you for letting me share.

The Savor Project 2013 – Week 1

And here we go! Week One:

I talk about going to the San Francisco Zoo, Paddle boating, to the PLAY! center and building with magnets, playing with army men and seeing Life of Pi.

So far, the 8.5×11 is working great. I haven’t found a way to fit my art yet but still thinking on it.

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.

Living Intentionally

There are people who like to set goals and those who shy away from them. During this time of year, I see a lot of articles on setting new year’s resolutions. How quickly they fall apart. How to not break them. How it’s better not to set them. Etc. etc.

But I don’t see nearly articles on what kind of goals to set. Why resolutions might be useful. What type of resolutions are more likely stick vs others.

There seems to be a belief out there that there are people who stick to their resolutions and those who don’t. And that’s that. So if you’re the kind of person who can follow through you’re in good shape. But if you’re not, well there’s nothing you can do; you were built this way.

I don’t buy that.

While it’s true that we all work differently and some of us can execute on personal goals more efficiently than others, I think it mostly comes down to how we set the goals and the content of the goals. And what goals represent for us.

I think for a goal to be effective it has to be three things:

1. Specific: Lose weight is not specific. Lose five pounds is specific.
2. Time-bound: Lose five pounds by when? What you do if you want to lose five pounds in a month is drastically different than what you could do if you wanted to lose five pounds in a year.
3. Measurable: How will you measure success. Lose five pounds is measurable. You take your current weight and figure out what five less is. Be a better writer is not measurable. How do you define better? How will you know you reached that goal? What does achievement look like?

I think there are other helpful steps along the way like setting positive, growth-oriented goals. Or goals that are more resonant to what matters to you in life, etc. But these three are the single most important part.

Once you set specific, time-bound, and measurable goals, the trick is finding how you achieve that goal. This is the second biggest failure point. Most people assume there’s one path to success and if they can’t/won’t do that, they cannot reach their goal.

For example, many people who set the goal to lose weight join a gym at the beginning of a new year. If you want to lose weight, the gym is your best bet, right?

Not necessarily.

This is where “knowing yourself” becomes super handy. If you know how you work best, you can create your own path to success. The gym is not the only way to exercise. You can take daily hikes. You can ride your bike. You can buy a treadmill. You can do a sport weekly. You don’t even have to take the exercise route. You can choose to eat exclusively whole foods. Or cut out alcohol. The goal when losing weight is to eat better and move more. There are many, many, many paths to that end. And the best one is the one you’re going to do. The one that works for you.

When I started exercising, I took it extremely slowly. I ran at a laughable pace. I increased by tiny amounts each month. Even when I could do more, I didn’t. I knew what worked for me was the consistency. I needed to be able to do it every single day so it had to not be intense. I didn’t give myself recovery time. Would it have worked if I ran 5 miles 3 times a week instead of 2 miles a day every day? Sure! Did my way work, too? Yes!

The trick is finding the way that works for you.

Taking that measurable, time-bound, specific goal and breaking it into little chunks of achievable tasks that resonate with you. With your way of life. With your personality. With your capacity.

The great thing about having goals is that it allows you to live your life intentionally. You spend your time doing what matters to you. (Assuming you picked goals that speak to you and not goals that make you look good for others.) It’s a great way to battle inertia. It’s a rewarding way to honor your life and your time.

The one thing we don’t get to save is time so how you spend your time is the most precious decision you can make. And finding goals that resonate with you and breaking them into tasks that work for you is a great path to living intentionally.

I have no doubt that every one of us can achieve whatever goal we set our mind to. What makes us break our resolutions is not who we are but how we define them and how we choose the path to achieving them.

A Book a Week – Spectral

I picked up Spectral on a whim. And while I did read it really fast, and enjoyed it, I wouldn’t necessarily recommend it. For me, it was a little on the fantastical side.

I liked it ok. And if you’re into paranormal stories, you might like it more than I did. I like them ok but I’ve just read stronger, better, more interesting books. Having said that, it’s a quick, fun read.

So, you choose.