Monday, February 23, 2015

SO MUCH TALENT, SO LITTLE SUPPORT


Where to start?
I think this is what has struck me this week.  There are just so many talented people in this world.  That's one point.  And the second is, much of this talent has to struggle to find a place to express it, use it, grow it, and more importantly, make some money with it. And the third is, there are places and people who work to solve this lack of connection between artists and survival.

I took my husband to a doctor's appointment.  Two women in the waiting room were busy creating.  One was hooking an original rug that was sophisticated and gorgeous (I say this in case you are thinking macrame of the 70's) and the other was knitting a complicated afghan in a cashmere creamy color. High level skill.custom artistry.  Where to show them and sell them was the question.
Let me mention Cia--a coffee in South Portland who is dedicated to displaying local artists. Thank you Cia

I've written a book and need a cover design. Before working with a local artist,
I went onto oDesk.  The amount of talent on this site is shockingly large and shockingly good.  It's an online free-lance market place for artistic talent.
I talked with talent from Macedonia, France, Sweden and the Philippines.  The portfolios are fun to go through. Thank you oDesk.

My daughter sings with three different groups.  Adult groups. They play for the love of their art. Yes, she loves her day job but she also loves her song. And so she and her colleagues schlep and drive long distances and haul equipment for the pleasure and the creative expression of performing and maybe just enough money for gas and dinner.  Last week was different. They performed at The Stone Mountain Arts Center in Brownfield, Maine. Here artists are treated royally. Lovely venue, well equipped. Delicious hot meal ready for performers  after sound check. Hot coffee,water, beer, wine at the ready.  Living room setting for the Green room.  \No sticky floor and stale doughnuts.  Even a cake with the bands name on it was on the table. No food or drink during performances. The audience comes to listen. After the performance, homemade pizza just in case artists were hungry. My daughter's group was stunned and giddy and ecstatic with gratitude.  And got paid a decent wage. Thank you Stone Mountain Arts Center

I won't even get started on books. I have a good eye for finding books that I will like. I am rarely disappointed. I read one book about every three days and don't run out of unique well written books. This not only means, I'm a profound bookworm, but that also, there are so many good authors out there. I am glad for self-publishing for the hope that it brings to isolated dedicated writers. Thank you CreateSpace, lightningsource, and all the other new channels for writers. No more arrogant agents blocking the way.

Wow, I'm getting up a head of steam. What am I--an NPR campaign host?
We need our artists to enhance our lives, to say what we don't yet know, to bring beauty that soothes and inspires when the News does not and to hint at the transcendent. I can't stand budget cuts for the arts and I thank everyone that does a part in supporting talent of all kinds.  What if everyone had help finding their gift and using it?  I mean everyone.  What would happen to hate?

"Artists are the radical voices of civilization"  Harry Belafonte (I watched the Oscars)








Sunday, February 15, 2015

I'VE GONE GROGGY AND I THINK I LIKE IT


Something about this long and brutal (and beautiful) Winter has put me to sleep.  Every night when I get under the covers in a cold bedroom, I feel like "ma in her kerchief and pa in his cap" who have just settled down, "for a long Winter's nap."

 Here's what I like: 

--Things get cancelled. More breathing space on my calendar.

--The world is literally quieter, muted by snow piles shoulder high.

--I like the beauty that is so shockingly odd if you think about it.  We are living 
   in powdered ice and acting like it isn't extraordinary. My friends in Mexico
   still don't believe it's possible.

--I do feel shut out from the larger world. I feel held in and I like it.
  I put off doing things. Deadlines are apt to be changed because of weather
  and seem more gentle. 

--I am kind of frozen like the world. As care for personal safety and even 
  survival come to the front, the rest of the world recedes during a dramatic
  blizzard day.  I am suspended for a while.

Lucky me. I have warmth.  I have resources.  And for a day, I forget that
we live in a world that still settles big problems like Barbarians an in an environment swirling with hate.  I prefer the blizzard



Monday, February 9, 2015

DOES YOUR OWN BRAIN ENTERTAIN YOU?


You already know I am a bookworm, I think. I have a busy brain that ranges widely. I don't bore easily and I seem to have a good
innate nose for what interests me.  In other words, I'm picky but still rarely dissatisfied with a book, an interest, an article, or a new approach. But if I am not interested, I give up easily because I can count on finding something better.

Back in the day of having to lug books rather than an iPad I always traveled with at least seven books or I would get nervous about my next fix.  I'm either very eclectic or just nuts. For instance today, I read about Christian women mystics,
The 22 immutable Laws of MarketingAll  the Light We Cannot See, every wedding announcement in the New York Times, The Book Review, a wonderful Mexican cook book, and an article on book design and fonts.  

I've always wondered what I would do if I couldn't get to books or vice-versa and if I had enough in my own brain to keep me entertained. (Should I admit this? It's true.)

Anyway for those of you who want to pack your brains with stuff to think about if the books run out, I recommend this site  brainpickings.org  Go to it.  Click on anything that tickles your fancy. Then do it again. And again. Only going where your curiosity gets piqued. Then let your brain do its thing--juggle it all around and put it together differently to entertain you.

My entertainment for the day---Can your nose smell the inside of your nose??

Monday, February 2, 2015

ARE YOU THE CEO? DON'T FORGET TO GIVE YOURSELF A PROMOTION



It's so easy to let yourself slip down into the lowest level accountabilities of your job description.  Especially if your company is in a particularly challenging passage. It's so tempting and easy to begin to micro-manage.  You might actually think you  know how to do the jobs of your direct reports (not).
And you can feel busy and like a good boss collaborating with your team. Or you can think you are setting high standards by picking on their work (so not).

At your level and that of your direct reports, you should all be doing something you don't know how to do and that you are not yet good doing. Most people have to stretch into a new promotion. It is a learning curve moment--or learning cliff.  You get to feel validated for past performance and more than a little nervous about the demand for new results and contribution. It's only a good promotion if stretch is involved. Otherwise you have promoted too late and are simply giving recognition.

SO, listen up CEO's.  Give yourself a promotion.
Look up.
Look out
Look new
Look fresh
Look excited
Look differently
Give yourself a new job description. Out of the ordinary.  Into the future.

Give yourself the job you really want where the risk activates you and doesn't wear you down with the grim familiar responsibility of everyday CEO ness.

WITHOUT WORDS DUE TO HAPPINESS



I will dig around in my happiness to find some words, but not many.
All my adult kids were in the house this week-end.  That  would be five.

We celebrated their dad's birthday.
We decided to keep it sloppy and lazy and easy.

Everyone flew or drove in, put on their flannel and settled in.
There was one late afternoon snow walk and forays out to the best bakery in the world (Scratch in South Portland, Maine) but that was it.
Other than that, we drifted in and out of conversations and marveled that some people slept in rooms they had never slept in before!

The best part for me was falling asleep hearing my kids laugh and knowing they were all safe (that's a left over from teen-age years).

So I have no more words for today.  Happiness trumps talk.
Then again, I am still in a carbo/ sugar coma.
(And the Patriots did win)