Archive for September, 2007

We Have Lift Off

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On Wednesday, the daytime September SF Incubator celebrated their final week together. All the Incubatresses helped each other with action items and provided contacts, support and encouragement. I’ve been inspired watching how all of them have really claimed their vision for their businesses. And it’s been breathtaking to witness the milestones they’ve accomplished in just four weeks. Watch out world!

Our lovely launchers pictured above include back row from left to right: Susan Meyer, Jaime Addington, Aurora Medina, Lindsay King, Megan Moyer, Pam McLaughlin, Jennifer Lynne, Allie Covarrubias (Bay Area LWL Director). Front row from left to right: Gina Wu, Britt Michaelian.)

All this launching has me super excited about leading the Oakland Incubator in November! Happy launching!

[tags]Ladies Who Launch, Incubator, women entrepreneurs[/tags]

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Active Minds

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On Saturday, my grad school friends, Liz, Shanti, Toni and I, got together for a mini Bay Area Active Minds reunion. We reminisced about our professors and classes and found it hard to believe it was nearly 10 years ago! Yikes! And a lot sure has changed since then, including a couple of little ones in our midst (that’s Zolly in the picture).

Staying connected to these amazing gals keeps me inspired. Liz has her own consulting company and has authored two books on business communication. Shanti is the Director of Development and Alumni Relations at Cal’s International House and a proud mother of two beautiful boys. And Toni is a high-powered consultant and she and her husband just purchased their first home.

Shanti, Toni and our friend Karen (who is now in Iowa) did the first ever Avon Breast Cancer 3-Day back in 1998 and bonded even more over blistered feet. I feel blessed to have these women in my life after all these years, even if we don’t get to see each other as often as we’d like.

At my mom’s 70th birthday party, she celebrated with friends that she knew since junior high. That is such a reminder to me about the importance of enduring friendships.

Who in your life have you not seen in awhile that you want to reach out to? How have you stayed connected to friends over the years?

[tags]Annenberg School for Communications, USC[/tags]

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Express Yourself

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After Friday night’s experience in the Expressive Arts class, I had a lot to process. There was so much for me to begin to integrate. Embracing the research and theories of an established field, rather than rebelling against something that felt too “masculine,” “mental,” “problem-focused” and “intellectualized.” I had lots of judgments coming up - probably based in my own fears and insecurities. I allowed myself to open up to ways of thinking that aren’t my normal mode of operation. I was reminded of one of my new commandments: “Go where you’ve never been. Go toward the roar. What’s in the way, is the way.” With this shift, I now saw tremendous value in the research and history and became inspired to do my own researching, hypothesizing and experimenting. I don’t tend to take a logical or rigorous approach to my endeavors and I could learn from that. It’s striking a balance of masculine and feminine.

On Saturday, as we moved into experiential activities, I loosened up more. For the first exercise, I was drawn to the earthy, malleable quality of clay. My impulse was not to break it into pieces, but rather to work with the whole and see what emerged; to create from. First the instructor had us center ourselves and sense what we felt in our bodies. I noticed both a sense of grounding and also an excitement or agitation , almost like an itching or a bursting out from my skin. She played music for us to see how that might add to our experience of art making. For me, I was inspired to create lots of energy and fluid motion, like ideas radiating from the center.

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I wanted to color my piece and since there was no paint, I improvised. I rubbed chalk on a scratch piece of paper and then dabbed the vibrant dust onto my sculpture. I loved the idea of repurposing this medium in an innovative way. And I ended up liking my “scratch paper” as it felt like an integral part of my overall piece.

What was so symbolic for me about this process was the idea of taking the concepts from Expressive Arts Therapy and integrating it into coaching. While we don’t analyze past issues or problems in coaching, we do look at different perspectives, tap into intuition and use our creativity to move forward. I’m borrowing ideas and approaches from one field and am finding ways to incorporate them into another, newer field. Lately I’ve found myself in conversations with other cool women who are exploring similar ideas. It’s like we’re on the verge of defining an emerging body of work. My piece represented that for me in many ways - the centering in myself, the borrowing of established wisdom and the boldness of putting myself and my ideas out there in ways I might not even understand fully yet.

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We also practiced authentic movement and then drew something based on our experience. During the movement, I found myself light and airy at first and then toward the end felt an immense draw to the earth and to take up space on the floor. I just allowed myself to explore, be lost and then find my way to a grounded place. As I write that, I realize that was actually my process in the class, too. I went in to try something new and learn, I found myself being resistant and then I discovered ways to make it my own and to be inspired from it.

This experience has underscored a somewhat new dream that’s slowly forming. I am sensing that eventually I want a physical space, an inspiring and centering environment for art visioning/expressive arts coaching, workshops, yoga and community gatherings. A place for others to come and express themselves, to explore, learn and grow. I really love how the creative process allows new and exciting things to unfold!

How can you use your creative process to imagine new things for yourself? In what ways can you engage your senses? What’s something totally different you’re willing to try?

[tags]Art visioning, expressive arts therapy, expressive arts coaching, authentic movement, art therapy[/tags]

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Reach for the Scarves!

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Friday was the first night of another class I’ve signed up for at JFK University. This time it’s an Introduction to Expressive Arts Therapy: A Jungian-Oriented Approach. Once again I found myself to be the only non-therapist/coach in the room (besides a new friend of mine, Laura, who is a therapist training to also be a coach).

When I entered the classroom, I was excited to see colorful scarves adorning a table. I had visions of colors swirling around the room in creative, playful expression throughout the weekend!

As we settled in, I started to noticed that there was a masculine-type energy in the room - a more staid, intellectual focus. Perhaps being in a classroom setting didn’t help me? I found myself having an adverse reaction and wanting to reject the information, the lecture, the questions as they didn’t speak to my heart or feed my soul… at least on the surface they didn’t, until I looked deeper. I started to get very curious about my reaction and began to look for the gift in it. What was it I couldn’t be with and what could I learn from that?

At the end of the evening, the instructor invited us to wander over to the table in the corner and pick up an object that spoke to us. I walked over and immediately grabbed a scarf. With my hand on the fabric, I looked over and saw that everyone else was going for the solid, tangible (”real”) objects in the center of the table - the rocks, crystals, shells. I suddenly doubted my choice and mouthed to the instructor, “Does this count?” She nodded gently.

As I played with the scarf, I was flooded with so many reasons why the scarf spoke to me. It’s fluid and flowing. It’s playful and beautiful. It’s bluish-green like water, which can be emotional and expressive. It’s expansive, able to hold a lot and I could wrap myself in it so it could be nurturing and integrating. It’s malleable, it could transform into other shapes - a flower, a small ball. It’s transparent and sheer - there’s nothing to hide. It’s soft and silky. So different from the other hard, small, rigid inanimate objects. It was something that was needed in the room - a touch of flair and femininity. A different perspective.

For me this was significant as it represents a journey I’ve been on of claiming the power of my own feminine style and leadership. As I shared some of that with the group, the instructor mentioned that in all the years she’s done this exercise, no one has picked the scarf! So, even though sometimes the feminine can be dismissed or overlooked (just like some might have thought the scarves were just decoration surrounding the objects) it’s important to know and own that it’s much needed in the world. And to take a stand for it! I now have another new motto to live by, “Reach for the scarves!”

[tags]Art visioning, masculine and feminine, expressive arts therapy, expressive arts coaching[/tags]

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