My art reception at the Empire Hotel was a great experience. I am not one for bar scenes but to be in NYC because I was showcasing my artwork was pretty cool. We left Boston at 9 am from South Station and arrived in NYC around 2:30pm left NYC at 10:30 pm and arrived in Boston at 3:30 am and went to bed at 4:30 am :P. We took a cab over to the Hotel and Lincoln Square. Dropped off my artwork at the Hotel and hung out around Lincoln Center until I met up with the art director. The actual event was from 6:30-9:30pm. This event gave me a goal to work towards in my career, traveling to different places to exhibit my artwork.
Category Archives: Excursions
Lapis Lazuli
I normally buy rings to commemorate major experiences in my life. For example, on my left hand I have my birth stone and it is from Australia, so that commemorates my birth. On my ring finger is a ring I inherited from my grandmother’s death. I like the idea that the wedding/engagement rings are supposed to be on the left finger because there’s a vain that is connected directly to the heart, so I use in the same way where my ring finger is a way to keep my grandmother close to me. My middle finger has nothing, index finger has wampum ring which commemorates my love for Cape Cod and my experiences there. On my thumb is a rose quartz which I got in Arizona which commemorates that experience. My right hand has two rings now. My thumb has an elephant ring which I also got in Arizona, when I bought those two rings there was a sale, so this elephant ring has always been lucky to me. Elephants also mean luck! Today I added another ring to my right hand, on my ring finger I bought a Lapis Lazuli ring from Colonial Trading a thrift store kinda shop next to the building where I work.
On the way to the train today, I went into Boston planning on stopping by Colonial Trading but didn’t expect to find anything – large fingers! On the train I kept seeing Lapis Lazuli and couldn’t figure out why let alone the meaning behind it. But I ended up leaving Colonial Trading with a Lapis Lazuli. I got home and looked up Lapis Lazuli in my Crystal Bible and was pleased and surprised to find a description that describes my experience at the Tearoom……
Crystal Bible (Judy Hall P 173-173)…. Lapis Lazuli opens the third eye and balances the throat chakra. it stimulates enlightenment and enhances dream work and psychic abilities, facilitating spiritual journeying and stimulating personal and spiritual power. This stone quickly releases stress, bringing deep peace. It possess enormous serenity and is the key to spiritual attainment.
Lapis Lazuli is a protective stone that contacts spirit guardians. This stone recognizes psychic attack, blocks it and returns the energy to its sources. It teaches the power of the spoken word, and can reverse curses or dis-ease caused by not speaking out in the past. This stone harmonizes the physical, emotional, mental and spiritual levels. Imbalances between these levels can result in depression, disease, and a lack of purpose. In balance, the harmony brings deep inner self-knowledge.
Lapis Lazuli encourages taking charge of life. it reveals inner truth, encourages self-awareness, and allows self-expression without holding back or compromising. If repressed anger is causing difficulties in the throat or in communication, Lapis Lazuli releases these. This stone brings the enduring qualities of honest, compassion and uprightness to the personality.
Lapis Lazuli is a powerful thought amplifier. it stimulates the higher faculties of the mind, bringing objectivity and clarity. It encourages creativity through attunement to the source. Lapis Lazuli helps you to confront truth, wherever you find it, and to accept what it teaches. It aids in expressing your own opinions and harmonizes conflict. It teaches the value of active listening.
Lapis Lazuli bonds relationships in love and friendship and aids expressing feelings and emotions. It dissolves martyrdom, cruelty, and suffering. As a gem essence, it dissolves emotional bondage.
Healing
Lapis Lazuli alleviates pain, especially that of migraine headaches. It overcomes depression, benefits the respiratory and nervous systems and the throat, larynx and thyroid, cleanses organs, bone marrow, thymus and the immune system. Lapis Lazuli overcomes hearing loss, purifies blood, and boosts the immune system. it alleviates insomia and vertigo, and lowers blood pressure.
Harvard Leadership Conference Recap
This Saturday I went to the Harvard Leadership conference as a “participant”. One of my Kirlian Photographs was submitted and exhibited on the sides of the conference room. Got a lot of positive feedback for it which made me happy. The first workshop I went to was called, “High Awareness through Spiritual Consciousness”. The speaker was a little hard to understand, but he basically said that we should be focusing on how our emotions affect our actions and by focusing on our emotions we become more in tune with the present moment, and thus more in tune to the realization that we’re all connected. By realizing that we should then present ourselves as individuals that stand out from the group and not act as part of a “following” because we’re trying to do what everybody tells us what we should do. Anyway, that’s what I picked up. My speaker was Chat Troutwine who spoke how presenting in a leadership role is like telling a story. Storytelling is very important to leadership and presenting oneself because the brain is hardwired to learn information in a story format. My second workshop was Designing for the Client; Building for the Community. It focused on 3-D design and architecture instead of 2-D design but the concepts are the similar. I was put into the design group and apart of trying to convince clients why design is important for a building. I also got a potential client out of the second workshop as well! I spoke about how design is more about psychology than anything else. The final speaker was Roger Love and he spoke about how to speak in front of a large audience and how music was a big part of how we speak even if we aren’t singing or performing the same kinds of techniques that performers and singers use can be applied to presenting as well. Overall it was a good day, just long. Glad to be home.
On the way to the conference I saw a playing card on the ground and ignored it. When I got there I was advised to go back and put a sign saying I got a permit for parking, and when I walked back to the conference a second time I picked up the card. It was the Queen of Hearts (in Tarot the Queen of Cups). The Q/Hearts is her character card… if that isn’t a sign of what is to come I don’t know what is…
Thrifting
I got a super cool sweater today at Global Thrift Store. I wanted a sweater that I could wear with my brown clothes since the only sweater I have is grey and that would just disintegrate with the last one that I wore all the time.
My heart continues to yearn for a certain someone. Knowing they’ll come back is just making this 10x more difficult. 🙁
Natick Open Studios
Today I went to the Natick Open Studios with my mom. It was cool to see local artists and to see what they’re showcasing. A lot of it was handcraft work so; jewelry, silversmith, pottery, mosaics, etc. There was photography and painting too. I always enjoy seeing open studios as it inspires me to keep continuing to focus on my own work. It also made me realize that since my grandmother isn’t around anymore to make jewelry for, I have so many beading supplies left that I really got to do something with. I’ve been meaning to use them up and I suppose that since I’m unemployed doing jewelry all the time wouldn’t be such a bad thing. Perhaps I could also make enough to sell. But it was 73 degrees and sunny today (and its October 20th!!) perfect weather to go to building to building to see artwork. I even met a painter who got a degree at Cedar Crest! Who knew! We were laughing because we always had the problem around here saying that we went to a “small liberal arts college in Pennsylvania” because not many people knew the school, but not this time!
Over the river and through the woods..
It really did feel like I went over the river and through the woods to Pennsylvania and back. I stayed with my friend Richelle, who was a year above me in school. I went to PA for 48 hours for an in-person interview at Signs by Tomorrow. The place I was interviewed for awhile ago. I think I needed a trip like that. To be by myself and not have to deal with people is nice. I forgot what that was like and why I liked being away from home for college so much. It gave me a sense of independence that’s difficult for me to find at home.
I really liked Flourtown. Its’ got that historic feel to it, but its a suburban town very much like the town I grew up in. So I really hope things work out with SBT. I really need to leave this place, its got nothing but terrible memories attached to it.
I think the interview/work day at SBT went well. It was cool to be doing work that I went to school for. The only thing I wish that went differently was that I actually got sleep. I ended up sleeping on an air mattress at Richelle’s and that didn’t go so well. I haven’t slept on an air mattress I think since I was a kid. So I ended up getting three hours of sleep. But I suppose you do what you have to do.
The drive there and back was actually not that bad. I think I paid about $40 in tolls though. On the way there I avoided that path but on the way back that’s where the GPS took me. Kind of disgusting.
So I should hear by the weekend or the beginning of next week. Mom and I were talking about earlier that all the signs were there. Ha.
I also had a dream. I don’t remember my dreams and they often tend to be prophetic in nature. I dreamt I was at a sign shop and there was pre-cut metal boards and paper boards hanging up on the walls. The team was there handing out t-shirts to customers and I came in and took one and stood by the team. Usually when I have a dream about something major its a good sign. haha.
Takara Japanese
The Price of Sugar

I just came home from a movie screening I went to with my mother called, The Price of Sugar and it was one of the better humanitarian documentaries I’ve seen. It was sponsored by the people at the Vineyard: Christian Fellowship. As someone who has travelled to the Dominican Republic with her church, I really felt seeing this film was necessary. I have been a supporter of the Faire Trade movement for awhile now and I just think it is one of the more beneficial movements out there. Some of the things that were spoken in the documentary really struck a chord with me. I suppose its because I’ve seen some of the poverty in the Dominican Republic – but there is a difference to be Haitian and living in the DR than a Dominican living in the DR. In some respects (and correct me if I’m wrong) but I’d assume that since the relationship between the DR and Haiti is so non-existent that I think I’d rather be a Dominican living in the DR rather than a Haitian because at some level. I think it would be very difficult for someone to live in a country where its’ natives despise them.
The whole documentary reminded me of a moment when I was with my HSYG and we were at a supermarket in the DR. Every time we went to the supermarket there was a Haitian family living outside. If I remember right I believe it was a mother and at least three kids. I think we were on our last day and we decided to give them all the left over lunches (unfortunately it only happened to be one sandwich left). The little boy of the family came up to the bus and we gave him a sandwich. The eyes on the boy grew so big that it was really quite moving to see. Such a mundane food item, as a sandwich, would seem like gold to someone who lives on nothing.
Bill Haney’s The Price of Sugar could do without its close-ups of sugar being poured onto a spoon, and would benefit from providing more information about the United States’s close relationship with the Dominican Republic’s sugar trade, which this eye-opening doc vividly illustrates is predicated on ruthless slavery. Nonetheless, the director’s investigation has a clear-sighted persuasiveness, as well as a formidable, complex central figure in the person of Father Christopher Hartley, the son of Spanish aristocrats who—after years working with Mother Theresa in Calcutta—moved to the Caribbean island and promptly began upsetting his parish’s wealthy and powerful sugar barons, the Vicinis. Tagging along with Hartley, the film (narrated by Paul Newman) captures sights of concentration camp-level subjugation and abuse suffered by Haitians whom the Vicinis (and their industry brethren) illegally import, imprison at filthy outposts known as bateys, and force to work until their deaths. Hartley’s aggressive efforts to bring these heinous practices to light is given vivid life by Haney’s inquisitive camera, as is the priest’s staunch conviction in the face of mounting Vicini-sponsored smear campaigns aimed at compelling him to leave the country. An authentically benevolent man of the cloth (and people), Hartley nonetheless also proves politically cunning, organizing strikes within the bateys and bringing American doctors and media to his parish’s overworked, malnourished Haitian cane workers. However, he’s perhaps not quite as cunning as the Vicinis themselves, whose response to Hartley’s tactics involves effectively stirring up Dominican nationalistic (read: racist) hatred for the “poorer and blacker” illegal immigrants, and then blaming their presence in the country on Hartley. The Price of Sugar‘s motive is to open American eyes by illustrating where domestic sugar originates, yet the efficacy of such intentions are somewhat weakened by the director’s focus on Hartley rather than the close commercial ties binding the two nations. Nonetheless, as an exposé of corporate and state exploitation of the poor, his doc is nothing short of blistering. source of text
Society of Cape Cod Craftsmen
Today my mom and I went to Brewster Cape Cod which is about 15 minutes from Eastham and we went to the annual crafts fair conducted by the Society of Cape Cod Craftsmen. Its’ been a dream of mine to find a craft I really enjoy doing and sell it at events like this, I already have a concept in mind…
Anyway, this crafts fair was unique, and well done. All the crafts people had to be juried in order to become a member of the Society. They had a lot of great crafts people (although my mom and I thought there was too much pottery and handmade Cookware and Bakeware. But I guess that’s just not my taste. I love pottery, but I just think it looks all the same…)
We fell in love with two artisans who did really unique things. First a beader who had really unique designs. I can’t really describe it but I guess you could call it sculptural. She made unique flower designs out of seed beads and not just your typical strung beads on tigertail. She actually used fishing line, something a bit different and they way the beads reacted when strung onto fishing line was really unique!
The second artist that we fell in love, did crocheting, shell collecting, paper making, and embroidery. She combined everything using shells into works of art that resulted in really intricate picturesque collages.
My mom loves the same thing she did and she had done a little embroidery and shell collecting herself. But unfortunately a lot of the pieces that would fit in our color scheme in our house the prices were a little out of our budget.
The entire show was a little out of our budget, but it was fun talking to the artisans and having them tell their story.
The artist, who made the piece of sea glass I found at one of the near by beaches into a pendant, was there.
I really want to get into making cosmetics this winter. That industry has always been a passion of mine and working with colors will be fun. I also thought about making my own pigments from natural materials from the Northeast to make it specific.
Like for example purple might be able to be taken from a purple hydrangea or a purple quohog clam. That would be fun. The concept of taking natural materials and make them into pigments is a medieval concept that the fresco painters did often, and thus the company would be, “Fresco Cosmetics”. Most make up artists see the face as a canvas and I think this would be cool to get into. Yes yes yes
Oh our neighbor behind us has also given us fresh clams, potatoes and garlic. So we’re in the middle of cooking up some fresh cape cod cowder.