Category Archives: Blog

PARIS, FR – Vernissage de l’exposition “GAIA”

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As usual click the above image to be taken to the facebook album.

 

Pine Needles hanging.
Pine Needles hanging.

 

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Visite de l’exposition du mairie du 18ème Eric Lejoindre et de la conseillère de Paris Danièle Premel commentée par la commissaire de l’exposition Julia Rajacic / Paris 18th city mayor Eric Lejoindre with the counsillor in charge of popular education Danièle Premel visiting the exhibition with the curator Julia Rajacic

 

Visit of the exhibition of the hall of the 18th Eric Lejoindre and the adviser of Paris danièle premel commented on by the commissioner of the exhibition Julia Rajacic / Paris 18th City Mayor Eric Lejoindre with the counsillor in charge of popular education danièle premel Visiting the exhibition with the curator Julia Rajacic

Busy Busy with Project Proposals

I’ve been using the down-time with work to rest up as well as work on my project proposals for some opportunities that came through this month. I am hoping that with all my hard-work and newly gained knowledge of project proposals that I will see some success next year. Otherwise, I will have to wait until next year to apply again and learn some more.

I met a grant application teacher at the Worcester State U. The Art of Science/Science of Art reception who teaches out of RI College and he was happy to look over one of my proposals. I got positive feedback from him which made me feel really good about that particular proposal. 🙂 I will hear from that particular proposal beginning of next month, not too long of a wait.

One other project was to get portfolio work together. And that was a nightmare . That particular organization was very picky about how things are put together and could disqualify you if you mess anything up. So for several weeks, I diligently worked on it… perfecting the layout + sequence of things as well as written work.

Freelance work has been slow… my client in Dubai had some work for me and then my client in Marlborough, got sick again so things have been delayed which I am OK with since my project proposals had the most immediate deadline.

I also had another surgery in my ear this past week… as that was the next step in the saga.. to remove all the infected cells in the ear canal and I will continue to go back for follow-ups.

I also have some things in the wings regarding K Glyphics and whatnot that I’m hoping will manifest in the next week or so.

Next monday, I am attending a small business workshop that my mom got an invite for but can’t go…. so I’m going in her place. Excited to learn some more things… with entrepreneurship you can’t go wrong with learning new things.

Next week is thanksgiving and we’ll be spending it at my brother’s and his girlfriend’s place in Arlington.

Another trip to Hyannis is coming up at the end of the month as I will be dropping off a Bluebells print at the shop where my products are at.

So just hanging in there, and focusing on staying active. Winter is one of the worst seasons for me, and one of the hardest ones to find work, so I am fearful but somehow I think I’m going to be OK this winter.

 

 

Notice | GAIA Delayed

Gaïa Artists listDue to the terrorist attacks in Paris on November 13th, the GAIA exhibition is delayed/postponed and will reopen when the country reopens. More information will be posted when it is received. EDIT: Exhibition opening has been postponed to November 26th.

#prayforparis

My heart goes out to the city of Paris and country of France today. France is very close to our hearts here at home and in the USA. Especially during this time with the GAIA exhibition – the curator is safe and is contacting the other artists. I had the word Paris in my third-eye all morning/afternoon on Friday, and couldn’t figure out why… and now I know.

I am very thankful that no one in my immediate circle was hurt or located in France at the time.

Take care of yourselves now.

Pet Peeves

I didn’t used to have many pet peeves, but as I’ve gotten older, there are a few things that I will no longer tolerate and if you can’t respect me and these intolerances please unfriend me now… excuse me, but I’ve been in a bad mood lately and I am PISSED tonight and need to get this off my chest.

1) Using a period of time worth of experience to make your point valuable and the right one in an argument… I.E: having over 10 years of experience in a field, so you know everything.

NO. NO NO NO. This attitude pisses me off more than anything in the world. YES, experience in crucial to knowledge and delivering a good product or advice, but you can be in a field for 10 years and still know jack shit… it’s all what you absorb and translate into your work and projects. If you have nothing to show, I can’t say that I can trust your experiences in the field.

2) This goes with the above: telling me that you know someone or your son or daughter has been in the field for 10 + years and therefore you know everything about the field.

NO. NO NO NO. You don’t. That’s equivalent of me saying that I know everything about engineering because there’s a couple of engineers in my family. NO.

3) Telling me to not do my job.

After being schooled in my field for over 4 years, self-taught for over 4 years, and worked in the field since 2010, I have a pretty good handle on what goes on in my field. I don’t know everything, yes, but I am open to new experiences

4) Pretending you’re an expert in my field, when clearly you have no idea.

Making art, creating a design, takes time, takes skill, takes dedication. If you hire me to make you something don’t act like you know my field, PLEASE just don’t.

5) Acting like a ‘know it all’ in my field

NO. This ties in with the first one… I don’t care if you’ve been in the field for years, or in over 70 exhibitions or whatever. You DON’T know everything and you WILL never know everything. If you have this attitude about your work, I cannot work with you. You are not open to suggestions and never will. There are SEVERAL different solutions to everything. YOURS aren’t the only one.

 

Winter Exhibitions

Post will be updated as info comes.PineNeedles

1. GAIA at La Maison bleue – Porte de Montmartre from November 18th – December 10th and Galerie Amarrage in January 2016 in Paris, France will host a selection of 24 artists from 12 countries to be apart of an exhibition with the theme of Women and Ecology. The exhibition is intentionally scheduled during the international summit for climate change. Pine Needles and Pine Needles #2 will be exhibited. More info .

2. 30 Below at Kathryn Schultz Gallery in Cambridge, MA from January 9th – 28th with a reception on the 14th – part of the Cambridge Art Association. Olivo will be exhibited.

CAMBRIDGE, MA – 30 Below

Olivo was accepted into Cambridge Art Association’s 30 Below exhibition for next January.

 

Juried by Mary M. Tinti, Curator of the Fitchburg Art Museum
Presented at the Kathryn Schultz Gallery, January 9 – 28, 2016
Award Presented January 14th Reception | Best in Show, $250

About Our Juror
Mary M. Tinti is the curator at the Fitchburg Art Museum (FAM). Tinti is an art historian and curator specializing in modern and contemporary art, with a focus on public art. Prior to her appointment at FAM she was the Koch Curatorial Fellow at deCordova Sculpture Park and Museum in Lincoln. ‘Ms. Tinti received her bachelor of arts degree in 2000 from Providence College and a Ph.D in 2008 from Rutgers University. Prior to joining the staff at deCordova, she was the first-ever public art fellow at the New England Foundation for the Arts (2010-2011) and the deputy artistic director of WaterFire Providence (2008-2010).
For more information click here.

30. below : Important Dates
JANUARY 4, 2016: Shipped Artwork Deadline
DECEMBER 12 – JANUARY 7, 2016: In Person Drop – Off
JANUARY 9 – 28, 2016: Show dates
JANUARY 14, 6-9PM: Opening Reception
JANUARY 29TH & 30TH, 11-5PM: End of Show Pick-UP

Congratulations to the accepted artists!

Christopher Abrams Could Cloud 3 Copper Wire, Styrene Plastic 7″LX5″WX4″H $250
Kristi Beisecker Olivo Traditional Photography 22″x28″ $400
Darek Bittner New York #17 Collage 8×10″ $350
Molly Blumberg Clouds For Mountains Handmade Paper, Found Wood 72″x20″x8″ $950
Olivia Boi Hardshape Series #86 Spray Paint and Latex Paint on Canvas 28 x 33″ $500
Carlie Bristow Untitled, part of “Food Landscapes” series Digital Print 16X20 $200
Emily Brodrick Jagged Acrylic Yarns 3’x3′ 1,700
Celine Browning Draw Plastic, Wood 18″x6″x8″ $375
Mia Cross Oleg’s Flowers Oil on Canvas on board 43″ x 36″ $2,000
Elizabeth Ellendwood Building Study 4 Archival Silver Gelatin Print 16×20 $450
Sarah Fagan Organize VII (Daylight Saving Time) Acrylic on Canvas 12 x 12″ $450
Anthony Febo “The Patriot Act” as part of the series “Captain America vs. The Universe” Digital Print 16X20 $150
Emily Garfield Aorta Isles (Cityspace #210) Water-Soluble pencil 24”x32″ $1,250
Aubrey Gauthier Funny enough Wood, Paint and Paper 3″ x 2.75″ $100
Graehound Durner’s Chandelier Mixed Watermedia on Arches Black 44″ x 30″ $2,300
Amanda Hawkins Mount Desert Isle Acrylic 34×36 NFS
Sofie Hodara Drone On Toner Transfer on paper 26 x 42″ $1,200
Alli Keller 23 (Lawn Games) Lithograph 23 x 29.5″ $400
Haley MacKeil Thin Wall, Revealed Linocut 22″ x 30″ $250
Brittany Marcoux The Birthday Tape Archival Inkjet Print 15″ x 19″ $300
Dina Martinelli Zulma Acrylic on Canvas 30″x36″ $300
Norah Remmers Small and Wise #2 Woodblock Print 26.5 X 32.5” $400
Nicole Reynolds Nobody Home Photography Size? $30
Steve Sangapore Virtuality Acrylic on Canvas 44″ x 32″ x 4″ $1,950
Hilary Tait-Norod This Is Personal Oil and Mixed Media on Canvas 36″ x 60″ $3,200

Info from: http://www.cambridgeart.org/30-below/

More on the Climate Summit in Paris

Below is an article by Michael T. Klare about the upcoming Climate Summit in Paris in which my artwork is in conjunction of during the GAIA exhibition.

 

Why the Paris Climate Summit Will Be a Peace Conference
Averting a World of Failed States and Resource Wars
By Michael T. Klare

At the end of November, delegations from nearly 200 countries will convene in Paris for what is billed as the most important climate meeting ever held. Officially known as the 21st Conference of the Parties (COP-21) of the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (the 1992 treaty that designated that phenomenon a threat to planetary health and human survival), the Paris summit will be focused on the adoption of measures that would limit global warming to less than catastrophic levels. If it fails, world temperatures in the coming decades are likely to exceed 2 degrees Celsius (3.5 degrees Fahrenheit), the maximum amount most scientists believe the Earth can endure without experiencing irreversible climate shocks, including soaring temperatures and a substantial rise in global sea levels.

A failure to cap carbon emissions guarantees another result as well, though one far less discussed. It will, in the long run, bring on not just climate shocks, but also worldwide instability, insurrection, and warfare. In this sense, COP-21 should be considered not just a climate summit but a peace conference — perhaps the most significant peace convocation in history.

To grasp why, consider the latest scientific findings on the likely impacts of global warming, especially the 2014 report of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC). When first published, that report attracted worldwide media coverage for predicting that unchecked climate change will result in severe droughts, intense storms, oppressive heat waves, recurring crop failures, and coastal flooding, all leading to widespread death and deprivation. Recent events, including a punishing drought in California and crippling heat waves in Europe and Asia, have focused more attention on just such impacts. The IPCC report, however, suggested that global warming would have devastating impacts of a social and political nature as well, including economic decline, state collapse, civil strife, mass migrations, and sooner or later resource wars.

These predictions have received far less attention, and yet the possibility of such a future should be obvious enough since human institutions, like natural systems, are vulnerable to climate change. Economies are going to suffer when key commodities — crops, timber, fish, livestock — grow scarcer, are destroyed, or fail. Societies will begin to buckle under the strain of economic decline and massive refugee flows. Armed conflict may not be the most immediate consequence of these developments, the IPCC notes, but combine the effects of climate change with already existing poverty, hunger, resource scarcity, incompetent and corrupt governance, and ethnic, religious, or national resentments, and you’re likely to end up with bitter conflicts over access to food, water, land, and other necessities of life.

The Coming of Climate Civil Wars

Such wars would not arise in a vacuum. Already existing stresses and grievances would be heightened, enflamed undoubtedly by provocative acts and the exhortations of demagogic leaders. Think of the current outbreak of violence in Israel and the Palestinian territories, touched off by clashes over access to the Temple Mount in Jerusalem (also known as the Noble Sanctuary) and the inflammatory rhetoric of assorted leaders. Combine economic and resource deprivation with such situations and you have a perfect recipe for war.

The necessities of life are already unevenly distributed across the planet. Often the divide between those with access to adequate supplies of vital resources and those lacking them coincides with long-term schisms along racial, ethnic, religious, or linguistic lines. The Israelis and Palestinians, for example, harbor deep-seated ethnic and religious hostilities but also experience vastly different possibilities when it comes to access to land and water. Add the stresses of climate change to such situations and you can naturally expect passions to boil over.

Climate change will degrade or destroy many natural systems, often already under stress, on which humans rely for their survival. Some areas that now support agriculture or animal husbandry may become uninhabitable or capable only of providing for greatly diminished populations. Under the pressure of rising temperatures and increasingly fierce droughts, the southern fringe of the Sahara desert, for example, is now being transformed from grasslands capable of sustaining nomadic herders into an empty wasteland, forcing local nomads off their ancestral lands. Many existing farmlands in Africa, Asia, and the Middle East will suffer a similar fate. Rivers that once supplied water year-round will run only sporadically or dry up altogether, again leaving populations with unpalatable choices.

As the IPCC report points out, enormous pressure will be put upon often weak state institutions to adjust to climate change and aid those in desperate need of emergency food, shelter, and other necessities. “Increased human insecurity,” the report says, “may coincide with a decline in the capacity of states to conduct effective adaptation efforts, thus creating the circumstances in which there is greater potential for violent conflict.”

A good example of this peril is provided by the outbreak of civil war in Syria and the subsequent collapse of that country in a welter of fighting and a wave of refugees of a sort that hasn’t been seen since World War II. Between 2006 and 2010, Syria experienced a devastating drought in which climate change is believed to have been a factor, turning nearly 60% of the country into desert. Crops failed and most of the country’s livestock perished, forcing millions of farmers into penury. Desperate and unable to live on their land any longer, they moved into Syria’s major cities in search of work, often facing extreme hardship as well as hostility from well-connected urban elites.

Had Syrian autocrat Bashar al-Assad responded with an emergency program of jobs and housing for those displaced, perhaps conflict could have been averted. Instead, he cut food and fuel subsidies, adding to the misery of the migrants and fanning the flames of revolt. In the view of several prominent scholars, “the rapidly growing urban peripheries of Syria, marked by illegal settlements, overcrowding, poor infrastructure, unemployment, and crime, were neglected by the Assad government and became the heart of the developing unrest.”

A similar picture has unfolded in the Sahel region of Africa, the southern fringe of the Sahara, where severe drought has combined with habitat decline and government neglect to provoke armed violence. The area has faced many such periods in the past, but now, thanks to climate change, there is less time between the droughts. “Instead of 10 years apart, they became five years apart, and now only a couple years apart,” observes Robert Piper, the United Nations regional humanitarian coordinator for the Sahel. “And that, in turn, is putting enormous stresses on what is already an incredibly fragile environment and a highly vulnerable population.”

In Mali, one of several nations straddling this region, the nomadic Tuaregs have been particularly hard hit, as the grasslands they rely on to feed their cattle are turning into desert. A Berber-speaking Muslim population, the Tuaregs have long faced hostility from the central government in Bamako, once controlled by the French and now by black Africans of Christian or animist faith. With their traditional livelihoods in peril and little assistance forthcoming from the capital, the Tuaregs revolted in January 2012, capturing half of Mali before being driven back into the Sahara by French and other foreign forces (with U.S. logistical and intelligence support).

Consider the events in Syria and Mali previews of what is likely to come later in this century on a far larger scale. As climate change intensifies, bringing not just desertification but rising sea levels in low-lying coastal areas and increasingly devastating heat waves in regions that are already hot, ever more parts of the planet will be rendered less habitable, pushing millions of people into desperate flight.

While the strongest and wealthiest governments, especially in more temperate regions, will be better able to cope with these stresses, expect to see the number of failed states grow dramatically, leading to violence and open warfare over what food, arable land, and shelter remains. In other words, imagine significant parts of the planet in the kind of state that Libya, Syria, and Yemen are in today. Some people will stay and fight to survive; others will migrate, almost assuredly encountering a far more violent version of the hostility we already see toward immigrants and refugees in the lands they head for. The result, inevitably, will be a global epidemic of resource civil wars and resource violence of every sort.

Water Wars

Most of these conflicts will be of an internal, civil character: clan against clan, tribe against tribe, sect against sect. On a climate-changed planet, however, don’t rule out struggles among nations for diminished vital resources — especially access to water. It’s already clear that climate change will reduce the supply of water in many tropical and subtropical regions, jeopardizing the continued pursuit of agriculture, the health and functioning of major cities, and possibly the very sinews of society.

The risk of “water wars” will arise when two or more countries depend on the same key water source — the Nile, the Jordan, the Euphrates, the Indus, the Mekong, or other trans-boundary river systems — and one or more of them seek to appropriate a disproportionate share of the ever-shrinking supply of its water. Attempts by countries to build dams and divert the water flow of such riverine systems have already provoked skirmishes and threats of war, as when Turkey and Syria erected dams on the Euphrates, constraining the downstream flow.

One system that has attracted particular concern in this regard is the Brahmaputra River, which originates in China (where it is known as the Yarlung Tsangpo) and passes through India and Bangladesh before emptying into the Indian Ocean. China has already erected one dam on the river and has plans for more, producing considerable unease in India, where the Brahmaputra’s water is vital for agriculture. But what has provoked the most alarm is a Chinese plan to channel water from that river to water-scarce areas in the northern part of that country.

The Chinese insist that no such action is imminent, but intensified warming and increased drought could, in the future, prompt such a move, jeopardizing India’s water supply and possibly provoking a conflict. “China’s construction of dams and the proposed diversion of the Brahmaputra’s waters is not only expected to have repercussions for water flow, agriculture, ecology, and lives and livelihoods downstream,” Sudha Ramachandran writes in The Diplomat, “it could also become another contentious issue undermining Sino-Indian relations.”

Of course, even in a future of far greater water stresses, such situations are not guaranteed to provoke armed combat. Perhaps the states involved will figure out how to share whatever limited resources remain and seek alternative means of survival. Nonetheless, the temptation to employ force is bound to grow as supplies dwindle and millions of people face thirst and starvation. In such circumstances, the survival of the state itself will be at risk, inviting desperate measures.

Lowering the Temperature

There is much that undoubtedly could be done to reduce the risk of water wars, including the adoption of cooperative water-management schemes and the introduction of the wholesale use of drip irrigation and related processes that use water far more efficiently. However, the best way to avoid future climate-related strife is, of course, to reduce the pace of global warming. Every fraction of a degree less warming achieved in Paris and thereafter will mean that much less blood spilled in future climate-driven resource wars.

This is why the Paris climate summit should be viewed as a kind of preemptive peace conference, one that is taking place before the wars truly begin. If delegates to COP-21 succeed in sending us down a path that limits global warming to 2 degrees Celsius, the risk of future violence will be diminished accordingly. Needless to say, even 2 degrees of warming guarantees substantial damage to vital natural systems, potentially severe resource scarcities, and attendant civil strife. As a result, a lower ceiling for temperature rise would be preferable and should be the goal of future conferences. Still, given the carbon emissions pouring into the atmosphere, even a 2-degree cap would be a significant accomplishment.

To achieve such an outcome, delegates will undoubtedly have to begin dealing with conflicts of the present moment as well, including those in Syria, Iraq, Yemen, and Ukraine, in order to collaborate in devising common, mutually binding climate measures. In this sense, too, the Paris summit will be a peace conference. For the first time, the nations of the world will have to step beyond national thinking and embrace a higher goal: the safety of the ecosphere and all its human inhabitants, no matter their national, ethnic, religious, racial, or linguistic identities. Nothing like this has ever been attempted, which means that it will be an exercise in peacemaking of the most essential sort — and, for once, before the wars truly begin.

Michael T. Klare, a TomDispatch regular, is a professor of peace and world security studies at Hampshire College and the author, most recently, of The Race for What’s Left. A documentary movie version of his book Blood and Oil is available from the Media Education Foundation. Follow him on Twitter at @mklare1.

Follow TomDispatch on Twitter and join us on Facebook. Check out the newest Dispatch Book, Nick Turse’s Tomorrow’s Battlefield: U.S. Proxy Wars and Secret Ops in Africa, and Tom Engelhardt’s latest book, Shadow Government: Surveillance, Secret Wars, and a Global Security State in a Single-Superpower World.

Copyright 2015 Michael T. Klare

 

Original Link: http://www.tomdispatch.com/post/176063/tomgram:_michael_klare,_are_resource_wars_our_future/

Inconsistencies

There’s something I’ve been wanting to write about for awhile to get off my chest.
My former harp teacher recently unfriended me on Facebook because she thought I was being ridiculous in that I wasn’t following my boss’s instructions that went against my education and previous experience in the field. She believed that since my boss wrote the check that I should follow their instructions to the T. In theory this is right. But only in theory – especially since that particular job wasn’t the only one and I didn’t really need it. I told her she had no right to reprimand me in front of my friends for being caught up in something that I was asking for clarification in. Someone I know who worked in scheduling agreed with me… and other things… I was just dumbstruck that she would call me out as such. She also thought she knew my field because her daughter worked in for over 10 years… I’m sorry, but you have no respect for what I do if you think you know what it takes to make a decent design and I’m sorry, but I wouldn’t call your daughter’s work to be anything spectacular either… she’s great at art and illustration and has a clever way to incorporate it into an image, but I wouldn’t necessarily call it great design… seen better.

As a design and marketing specialist, I am typically hired for my knowledge and skills in the field. It’s how my career took off – at Minuteman it was how I was hired… and I continue to stand out in my field with my creativity and design skill – I get jobs and gigs for it and that’s the way it should be. I’ve been freelancing since 2010 and have a very good understanding of the field. I may be young, but I am not inexperienced in my field. I have been hired for my proficiency, etc. so do not try to tear me down or disagree with something I feel strongly with. My ideals and morals have gotten me this far in the field and I will not step down to someone who doesn’t know. Honestly, it’s like me saying that I know all about mechanical engineering because my Dad’s been working in the field for over 30 years… that’s ridiculous! I know the basics of electronics, but other than that, not much…!

But, I’m sorry. If I have been trained and taught to do a certain way and I am hired for it, I will not let anyone else tell me otherwise – why hire me if you can’t allow me to do my job?? And otherwise, the job is probably not a good fit – if you can’t handle this from me, we can’t work together.

I’ve been studying, practicing, educated, experienced in graphic design for over 10 years. My first commission was done late middle school. I am not going to ‘dumb down’ my skills just because an ill-informed boss wouldn’t agree with me on something that I have been taught and trained and do very well in.

I may not be working in a print shop, but my work goes directly to the printer via my boss. It is part of my job as a graphic design specialist to make the document as impeccable and perfect as possible so that the final product is something the boss or customer can be proud of. I’m not going to let grammar technicality inconsistencies and typos ruin a design I spent hours creating – it’s a reflection of the designer and reflected as an inexperienced one – which I am not. I had a potential client call the other graphic designers he’s worked with assholes because they left typos and grammar technicality inconsistencies in their designs and didn’t have attention to detail. Excuse me, I don’t want to be seen as an asshole in my field, in front of my peers because of a lack of attention to detail.   If I am taught and trained to put extensions in numbers, I will fucking do that, if you disagree with me, why hire me?

So to my harp teacher – sorry, but you’re wrong on this one, even though you so wanted to be right. Telling me to not do my job as a specialist in my field is ridiculous. You also can’t assume you know everything without having worked a day in the field… so good on you for unfriending me.

To Stay, or leave…

I am torn. I have been struggling with myself to drop you or to stay. Whenever I tried to contact you in the last year, you turned me away, denied everything. I may have been there for you – as they say – but you weren’t there for me. You didn’t even try, couldn’t care less. I have been told you are planning a reunion… in dreams I have been told to stay. But how can I stay for someone who couldn’t even be there for me? The pain that’s been caused is transcendent… goes deeper than anything I’ve experienced.

I told you that I stayed at your company as long as I had because I felt that there was a connection between us. A connection that I cherished. I could’ve left easily… but I felt something and couldn’t bare to think about loosing you… The fact you said no, or that you didn’t feel the same, floored me. It broke my heart, my soul. Why did I bother to stay at a place that long, to be abused that long… only for nothing? Only to be taken advantage of? To be thrown out like I meant nothing to you? When you acted like our connection meant everything?

I am torn with just giving up on you and moving on or to stay with what I feel and to stay with you. I feel for you, surely, very much… in me, our connection is still strong. But I feel betrayed. Left, forgotten, like nothing we went through ever meant to you. All the energy and strength… meant nothing to you.

Yet, I am madly in love with you. I feel very deeply, strongly, something I can’t just shake off. No matter how much you’ve hurt me, the love is stronger than the pain. Which if you do reunite with me… is probably why I will accept. No matter what… the love I have for you I believe in and I believe you feel as strongly for me as I do for you. But you could care less, care less about what we been through or what you mean to me… you aren’t just a boss, you mean more to me than that.

I am SICK! + Life Updates

I came down with a head cold on Saturday. It started with throat tightening and nausea and it’s progressed to a sore throat on Sunday, then on Monday it went to my nose and now it’s turned into a nasty cough. I REALLY hope I get better by Halloween night as I have a psychic reading event in Salem and blowing my nose constantly or coughing constantly in front of people is just gross!

The following Sunday, I am driving down to Hyannis to drop my products off at Seaporium. And the following week I’ll be picking up artwork from the BPL as well as potentially going to a portfolio review. I will also be going to Holyoke to pick up artwork as well as my fall shows are ending.

My proposal for the Guggenheim Fellowship competition progressed to the next round of work samples, so I have to get those together.

I finally have gotten in touch with my Bliss client again, apparently they sent me something about the craft shows I was supposed to work at a few weekends ago but I never received it, but it was OK since they said they didn’t need extra help anyway… anyway we’ll be speaking on Thursday.

I also think my ear closed up again, or is starting to, so thankfully I have my appointment with them on Thursday. I hope it’s just my head cold, but I’m not sure.

In general, I’ve just been resting, regaining some strength as I am running out of steam. I really want to go on vacation to visit my friends in the south but I can’t afford to at the moment. Honestly, I’m not really sure when the next vacation will be for me. Italy wasn’t really a vacation as I was making artwork … lol and I’m still paying it off. I know $600 isn’t a lot but considering work is slow at the moment, it’s taking a long time for me to pay it off…

I just hope something more stable comes to me soon.