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The Joy of Running Out

July 28, 2023 kira

Short colored pencils next to a colorful mandala.

Let’s pick up like old friends…

I’m not sure these days how many people read blogs, so I’ll write for myself and let you read. 😉

My art and materials have changed since we last spoke. I’ve shifted to coloring my own drawings, and messy collage work in my art journals. The imagery and details have deeper meaning — I referenced one in my last therapy appointment to the delight of my therapist.

When I started creating art, it was a struggle to translate my emotions from words — which was my primary way of expressing myself — to images. When you pick up art later in life, after college, there’s a learning curve. Composition. Color. Line. Medium. Substrate. I feel my early days was me throwing whatever made me smile at the page and seeing what stuck. Then manipulated to try and tell a narrative.

I rarely use paint, unless it’s in the form of a marker. I collage with a glue stick. Whatever I use most is within reach of my giant chair in the living room, where I do 80% of my art. And for a girl who rejected many coloring books because the tiny details made my hands ache…it appears that doesn’t apply when I am the one doing the drawing!

What’s different is me.

While we all long for the inspiration that propels us to create every day, I often struggled doing so. I was ill and exhausted and wished I could do more, create and experiment, like my friends. I did my best, said, “Good enough,” a lot.

I’m living in a new state — my third! — in my own comfortable apartment filled to the rafters with art supplies. I encourage you to find a closet or cabinet that holds anything else (ok the kitchen is just the bulbs for my studio lights, but it’s the safest space). You won’t find one. There’s less stress and more self-care. I work a wonderful day job I love, but also continue to struggle with mental and physical health issues.

I say this because, about a year ago, something amazing happened: I started working at least 2 hours a day on art. It started with coloring the work of other artists, then drawing florals, collage, and now I live in the world of mandalas and the mix of supplies that continue to inspire me.

(I’m actually taking a break from my current one; I’m in hour 7.)

As you can figure by the tumbleweeds gathered in the corners of this blog, I didn’t share much on social media. I don’t spend nearly as much time on my phone, and when I post, I’m in the frame of mind that I’m sharing with my friends. There are rarely hashtags, the posts are inconsistant, and doesn’t see much engagement past my Facebook friends. It wasn’t very important, running to share something the moment I put pencil to paper; I fell into this pitfall a few times in my life, and it always ruined and disrupted my inspiration.

Now? Now I make stuff, and if people like it, awesome! I actually taught my first class in 10 years to a small group of friends and delighted more in the kind words from friends who shared my post. Because my students were friends, I didn’t feel pressure to have everything set up perfectly. I no longer have a DSLR to film with, and my laptop is a modified MacBook Pro from 2009. I loved teaching live, as I could get feedback from my students, as well as answer their questions, in real time.

(I’m working on a ‘sequel’ right now, as I ran out of time to share everything!)

The joy? Using much loved supplies to the point they need replacing because of how much you use them. Being able to info dump at friends all I’ve learned from wearing out even the expensive stuff.

Sometimes, you need to run out of what was so there’s room for what can come. But the only way you get there is to just run free with radical acceptance, use the pretty things, and allow something you never expected to take root and grow.

I’ll see you next week, friends.

💜 Kira

(Yes, I am changing my legal name!)

In art journal, life + art lessons, Mandalas
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I have never angsted about a journal size like this in my life

April 18, 2021 Samie
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If I can’t come and post about issues I’m dealing with about journal sizes here, where can I go?

I’ve been working in an A5 sized book since December, the blue one up there with the whale on the cover — a cute and good purchase from Notebook Therapy. But when I found out I could get a B4 sized one from Archer & Olive, I was ecstatic. I’ve always loved working in composition book sized journals, and make most of mine to be that size when creating handmade journals. So I ordered one — I’m about 15 pages from the end of my current book, but figured I could still add to it while working in the new one.

With bated breath, I awaited my delivery. Refreshed the tracking. The arrival of my package was going to lift my spirits after days of feeling sick from my first shot. When it arrived, I cut it open and took out that beautiful white box you see on IG and FB ads (well, on my ads). Pulled the book from the box and ran my hands over the cover. It’s gorgeous.

There are pages in my current book that I wished I’d had more room for. So getting the larger one has been a thought in my head for weeks.

But then, I saw my current book out of the corner of my eye, and a wave of sadness washed over me. I love my book. The pages are full of so much. Writing and drawings and collages. It called to me like the toys from Toy Story when Andy was talking about donating them.

I’ve worked on a few pages in the new one and was like, I have to fill this whole page? Like, there’s so much room? Maybe I should go back to the old one? But then I’ll be switching to this one at the end?

Here’s the thing — I don’t have to fill the entire page. I can draw in the middle and leave the rest blank. I can make fun layouts and have lots of white space (I like white space. Look at the blog LOL). The paper quality is amazing, buckling less under watercolors than the Notebook Therapy one. And I found a cute book cover at the knockoff Daiso in town to keep it clean — I do tend to spill water on the rolling table, and today at the park, the ground was damp-ish under the blanket and made the bottom cold. Spent this much on it, gotta keep it nice!

With all the stuff on my mind, it’s kinda fun to focus on the little things.

This is still a developing story. Come back for updates on the 10pm news.

love,

samie

I framed this finished piece and it looks awesome! Been working on another…

I framed this finished piece and it looks awesome! Been working on another…

In art journal
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Diary of a First Shot Spoonie

April 16, 2021 Samie
The most 2021 art journal page ever.

The most 2021 art journal page ever.

(there are some journal pages as a bonus at the end of this post!)

As Arizona opened up vaccines for everyone, I signed up for an appointment and went for my first dose of the Pfizer vaccine. The whole thing was like a go-kart track met a drive through; we wound through the serpentine path, the truck in front of me having to go slow and almost back up around each curve.

(My car has an amazing turning radius, thus, my fun was ruined by the giant truck going slow in front of me.)

Each stop on the trip was full of more questions. Do you have allergies that cause anaphylaxis? Have you had any other vaccines? What are you allergic to? My only food allergy is avocados — she asked what happens. “Well, my throat gets a tickle and so I just stop after that.”

“Ah, ok. But like, your throat doesn’t close up?”

“Never ate enough to get there.” But I’ve wanted to. Oh, I’ve wanted to. Guac is…so delicious.

Now, my body is, well, sensitive when it comes to medications. There’s only a 15% difference between a name-brand and generic medicines. And I can’t take the Lyrica generic because it makes me really, really sick. Like, constant migraines, overwhelming fatigue, pain, emotional instability. It took a month and a half to figure out that’s what was causing my issues, and now I have to get a special exception with my insurance to get the name-brand Lyrica that allows me to…function.

So it’s no surprise this shot caused a reaction. As I’ve already had COVID, the first dose put me into COVID-lite. I’m still trying to shake the exhaustion and nausea a week later. And I feel like all this progress I’ve made over the past six months feels negatively impacted. Ugh. It’s a bit disheartening…I’ve spent most of the week in bed. In fact, this is the first time I’ve sat in my recliner in over a week!

My comfort has come from my journal and books. I have done a bit of art every day, and even got some new toys since I last spoke with you all! I’m going to do a video about them, but the hint is I got them from Jane and OMG COLOR! I’m always on the lookout for supplies that Spoonies can easily use in bed or on the couch, and definitely want to share these with you in a video soon.

Anyway, that has been my week since last Friday. I’m a bit behind on projects, but am not going to push myself. I’m listening to my body, trying to take care of it, and not putting any pressure on myself. I don’t need to do anything this weekend…so anything I do is icing on the cake.

Before I go, I wanted to let you know I’m planning on doing some art on stream Sunday morning. I was joined by a couple people last week, so keep an eye on my Facebook to find out more. Or join the mailing list. Or here. I’m going to try to blog more. Wasn’t this supposed to become my very public diary? Time to get focused on what matters!

love,

Samie

An experiment in layers. Watercolor writing, black ink, layer cakes, and collage including resin paper made from Dina Wakley and Tim Holtz tissue paper.

An experiment in layers. Watercolor writing, black ink, layer cakes, and collage including resin paper made from Dina Wakley and Tim Holtz tissue paper.

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In diary, art journal
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