Showing posts with label work. Show all posts
Showing posts with label work. Show all posts

Tuesday, March 31, 2015

The Right Time


 Istanbul - what a beautiful place


I got a Skype job interview with an international school in Istanbul. I'm not even thinking about the possibility of it happening yet. First I need to speak with them, see what they have to say and if it would be right for me.The job would be really fun I think, working in a school library K-12, collaborating with the teachers and tech team.

I asked my friend J, "well if I like what they had to say, would this be the right time to do it? I promised to myself I'd stay here for 3 years."

"What time is ever the "right time" to do these things?"

My mother seems to not be on board, says "it's too far away."

I've moved alone to cities before within the US, but never in a foreign country. A part of me is scared to do something like that all alone. But this is something I've always wanted to do and it has presented itself. I need more details.

Tickets to the rest of Europe from Istanbul are maximum $200.00. I could take weekend trips to Rome and Athens. :)

And as always, there is nothing much here currently for me anyways. I have friends, but other than that I own no home, I have no partner.

Only time will tell. I'm trusting the Universe to be my guide. I think if you're meant to do something, change your trajectory in a different way, you will know it. Listen to your gut it will give you the answers. And of course, don't be blind to coincidences, AKA divine signals. 

Turkey Travel Cheat Sheet; Sign up at www.wandershare.com for high-res images.

Thursday, September 18, 2014

A Masterpiece


Once upon a time, I dated an artist. It was a very short romance. As most stereotypes, he oozed charisma. His flirtations were a wide net and I was the catch; inescapable. I had no chance the moment he put his arm around my waist and whispered in my ear, “I think we’re going to be trouble.”
The hooks were in deep. But then came the mood swings, the verbal abuse … the other women. He no longer talked with me, but at me. All conversations were art lectures, or therapist appointments in which I played the role of the incompetent therapist. Listening for hours, not able to offer advice, and leaving more perplexed about “us” then when I had walked in. His narcissism and womanizing revealed itself soon enough and that lead to a swift demise.
I went to a music concert recently and this quote from a song stuck out to me:
"Like a flame not allowed to last very long but how fantastic and strong."
(Frontier Ruckus - If the Suns Collapse)
From my end, our relationship was as short as it was intense. But it was not all bad, because I learned some invaluable lessons. I learned what I will allow and what I will not. I learned that I want to be an equal in a partnership, not a fiddler player of the background music to someone else’s life story. The question this short relationship asked of me was, do I want to be the muse or do I want to be the artist, the creator myself? I have learned I am the creator of my own life story.
So this afterthought isn’t about how to date a creative mind. This is about how to cultivate your own creative power, how to become your own creator.
 At some point you must find the strength within yourself to step out from your partner's shadow. Living in the shadow of an artist can be difficult. Artists are contagiously creative, passionate, and emotional.  They brood in thought and like a mood ring can be 50 colors in one day. Not all these traits are bad. But they can effect you negatively if you let them. The American photographer, Lee Miller, met surrealist artist, Man Ray, when she was 22 years old in 1929. She became his lover and muse. While with him, she managed to learn from his photographic techniques, help run his studio, and become an artist. At 25, Miller left Man Ray and Paris to return to New York and establish a portrait and commercial photography studio with her brother Erik as her darkroom assistant.  She would go on to become an acclaimed photographer for Vogue, serving as war correspondent during WWII.
Lee Miller in Hitler's bath

Lee Miller in Hitler's bath Photo: David E. Scherma © Lee Miller ... http://www.pinterest.com/pin/177329304052472517/
Examine yourself. Who are you and what are you creating? The painter, Frida Kahlo, once said, "I paint myself because I am so often alone and because I am the subject I know best." Meeting the famous artist Diego Rivera at age 20, Frida wanted his opinion on her work. He replied, “You’ve got talent.” This encouragement and her perseverance would result in the Louvre buying one of her paintings, “The Frame”; the first work by a twentieth-century Mexican artist to be purchased by the renowned museum. Although Kahlo’s fame came posthumously, her authentic sense of self has lived on forever in her art and its admirers. Your creations are eternal.
The Frame by Frida Kahlo

I invite you to create a list of qualities you’d like in an ideal partner. In a 1981 speech given at Yale, the ground-breaking feminist, political activist and journalist, Gloria Steinem stated, “Some of us are becoming the men we wanted to marry.” Ask yourself if you have the qualities you would like to have in a partner. If you do, that’s great. If you don’t have them, focus on those qualities you lack and see how you can cultivate them. Remember to create your own masterpiece before giving all your paint away to a jackass. Your personal artistry will lead you to making your very own masterpiece if you let it.






Tuesday, March 25, 2014

Don't be chicken shit.

TEDxAmsterdamWomen 2011 - Lauren Zander - No One is Coming to Save You! Becoming Your Own Hero


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_ntKfkGnvMA

This TED talk changed my life last year and I come back to it when I need it.

It's about you BEING THE SOLE NAVIGATOR of your life: both an amazing blessing and a huge responsibility.

It highlights the truth between living and living your dream is ACTION. There really are no excuses. But it also doesn't mean you need to "fix" anything or be "the best" in the next 24 hours. We have lots of time and resources.  All we need to do is begin and that is all.

Tuesday, November 5, 2013

Your Point of View

I saw Mary Ellen Mark speak tonight. She and her work is remarkable. Her career has spanned from India, Mexico, Brothels, Celebrities, High School proms, Homelessness, Mental Hospitals, Circus performers, Broadway from the 1970s. She most recently has partnered w/ a Pharmaceutical company, Novartis, making short documentaries with her partner on pediatric care for children with cancer, autism, blindness and developmental syndromes. She shared some of the shorts with us tonight and I came very close to tears. Here are some notes I took and wanted to share. I think for any beginner or more advanced photographer/artist, this advice is great to know.:

  • Black & White vs. Color:
    • She loves and appreciates color and respects those photographers who know how to use it. She has used color in her work, but she has a love for Black & White. She said, "I can tell if my students are shooting in B&W or if they are shooting in color and making it B&W." I thought this was a really interesting approach to color and execution. 
  • She shoots in analog
  • She detests instagram and cell phone pictures - she sees them as social media marketing tools, not photos or art. I personally disagree with this outlook, but coming from her it makes sense. She is a photographer from back in the day when magazines showed non-glossified, non-photoshopped pieces about world issues. I can't say many magazines do that anymore. In fact, there aren't that many print outlets anymore for photos, mostly online - so i think she is right and wrong.
    • She went on to say she hasn't heard from a magazine asking for her to do a shoot in a year and she doesn't quite mind because magazine photos nowadays are "glossy, decorations" not raw pieces of point of view. 
  • It takes many years to develop ones point of view
  • When she has students do a project she doesn't take them somewhere and have them shoot all the same thing at the same time, but she rather tells them to go out on their own and do it, so they can develop a strong point of view without other influences
  • Paraphrasing: "Photography is like writing, it's not accidental, not simple. It's not like you shoot and it's art. [She] asks her students why they shot something the way they did. She wants to make a point to figure out the thought process behind a shot, a picture. 
  • She said it is easier shooting someone she doesn't know, because her viewpoint is less influenced by the outside factors of that person and her's history. Whereas, if there is no history, her viewpoint is fresh, more free. She didn't say she preferred it one way or the other, she was saying how your relationship to the person you are shooting effects the way you shoot them. 
  • She talked about not settling and fighting for what you believe in. Follow your heart.
All and all it was yet again another inspiring lecture to attend. It made me feel those artistic bones rattle inside of me, wanting me to do more and try harder. Always, always, always I must. 
Here are only a SMALL sampling of hers. Enjoy!

by Mary Ellen Mark

Mary Ellen Mark


Woody Allen | by Mary Ellen Mark

Former Lone Ranger, Clayton Moore.  Photographed in his Los Angeles home by Mary Ellen Mark.

Prom  Mary Ellen Mark ©

Mary Ellen Mark


1963 by Mary Ellen Mark





Thursday, October 31, 2013

Levo League

Last night I had the pleasure of attending a "Levo League" happy hour in DC.


Levo League is a social good startup designed to elevate young women in the workforce by providing the career resources needed to achieve personal and professional success.

Check it out here:
 http://www.levo.com/home

If you check the online community, you can see there are numerous chapters across the country, offering networks to find other women in the same career stage.

As a young woman, I feel belonging to this group will help a great deal in navigating my career. It is a fun way to ask others for advice, or learn what they are doing in their careers.  As a young woman at my first professional job, it's nice to have the support of strong, independent women in the same place as myself, and women who have already gained years of experience in my network.

At last night's happy hour I met some wonderful people. Two of them gave me a VIP PASS to FotoDC's 6th annual photo week launch party!!! I'm obsessed with photography so this is something I did not expect and am soooo looking forward to attending this weekend w/ these new gfs! :)

Last night was a reminder to put yourself out there, meet new people. Having many different networks and social circles can enrich your life in many ways.

They ALSO have a pinterest page!!!
http://www.pinterest.com/levoleague/

Wednesday, October 2, 2013

you gotta work!

OMG. work was very stressful today. I love my work place but so many projects on my plate!!! And next week is a big event so everyone is planning and making last minute projects happen...which i am involved in. besides all my other deadlines, i've added these.

i am very excited to write an article in a magazine. i was given the chance by an editor at my work. so i'm excited to promote what i do and explain why it's important.

i'm also proposing a presentation for a conference.

i find it stressful sometimes to keep up on all the cutting edge knowledge in my field. i guess conferences can help with this, but i really need to start reading more journals on a regular basis, like when i was in grad school. i think that would help me feel more in the know.

i also need to stop comparing myself to others. it's a nasty habit that has been popping up in my mind lately. i am WAY too hard on myself. it's good b/c i feel like i get  A LOT of shit accomplished, but on the downside, you cannot be perfect, nor can you be "superwoman" - which i feel our society instructs us to do every other moment.

i'm also WAY too addicted to social media networks. my fb is a time suck and i'd love to eliminate it from my life. i really love seeing my friends who live far away and what they are up to via fb. i don't think i'd have time to call ALL of them weekly. so i basically just need to keep it, but DRASTICALLY limit the time i spend on it. Rome wasn't built in a day.

Still creative writing. Have not even thought of turning it in for publication yet. not even there yet. But it's nice to take it more seriously. In my sad moments i just think of RAYMOND CARVER.

I want to take a photography class so i can learn how pictures are properly taken, the art of it. i've worked with photos for 6 years now and have no real training in that aspect of the medium. but i know how to legal deal with them and archive them and preserve them-------YAHHHHHHHHHHHH!