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Nothing Like Sharing with Kindred Souls!

Nothing Like Sharing with Kindred Souls!

God is so good!Sharing your creativity and your faith with kindred souls truly inspires awe! I got to do that all weekend long, and I feel like non-stop Hallelujahs are bursting out of me! I’d flown to DC to attend the 8th Biennial Sacred Threads Exhibit, which features over 300 juried in examples of spiritually themed textile art (including 2 of my pieces). Arriving at the Floris United Methodist Church’s amazing facility in Herndon, VA on Friday, I first stepped into the huge sanctuary, adorned with an array of inspiring liturgical banners, and prayed.

The vestibule outside the Sacred Threads exhibit set just the right tone. It was filled with books about creativity being used in medicine and healing and there were beautiful full-color catalogs of the work.  There was even a USB drive for sale with recordings of the artists talking about their quilts, going beyond the published artists’ statements. Handmade prayer flags were on display and more were being made. Committee members had an exhibit of small pieces with their varied interpretations of what “forward” means to them. Small wall quilts were on display — to be selected as thank yous for those donors contributing over $100 to the non-profit organization that puts on the show. The atmosphere welcomed everyone warmly. (There was even a separate table full of gluten free goodies during the reception!) Of course, the exhibit itself was breathtaking. By the way, if you think of quilts only as patchwork for the bed (as beautiful and intricate and glorious as those can be), think again! This is an ART SHOW full of wall art, traditional and contemporary, and some even 3-D!

Over the weekend, many different kinds of creativity were evident, not just textile art! I met two young filmmakers who interviewed me for Quilt Alliance and Sacred Threads documentaries — they were creatively jazzed and so dedicated to their work. Next I met Carmen Taggart — for the first time in person. She is a VA with Spirit, a multi-talented creative woman and creativity champion, a terrific help to me in many ways, and great fun. I also enjoyed meeting her friend, a wonderfully passionate chef! The next morning, I got to talk creativity with my brother, a passionate dog photographer (see www.GreggPatrick.com), and his wife, a sister in faith and graphic designer, originally from Poland.

Back at Sacred Threads for the Opening Reception, I met maybe a hundred incredible, on fire, spiritual fiber artists, many of whom are also painters, collage-makers, poets, writers, and educators. Most are Christians, although the show’s mission is clearly ecumenical. The whole atmosphere was one of unity and diversity, open celebration of spirituality and inspiration, healing and joy, as well as acknowledgement of  life’s challenges including grief, despair, senseless events, and expression of hope for peace and brotherhood. We were all so excited to meet each other. Even those like me who are on the introverted side seemed to be energized after hours of this!

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Stained Glass in Floris United Methodist Church’s Chapel and Jan Carter’s “Celebrate the Eucharist”

This beautiful stained glass and my friend Jan Carter’s “Celebrate the Eucharist” quilt next to it touched me, too. After the show closed for the day (it runs through July 26th), we had an artists’ dinner with great table conversations and a wonderful presentation by a talented Christian fiber artist and painter, followed by a fun Q&A.

Praise God for all of this creativity and spirituality gathered together to bless all who came, all who worked on it, and everyone else who will be touched by the fruits of it!

Guarding Against Overwhelm

Guarding Against Overwhelm

Permission - Do Not DisturbAs May comes to a close, let’s give thanks for the protection we’ve received and the protective tools we’ve become aware of, as well as the energy, spirit, and/or armor of God that helps keep us aligned with our sacred creative calling. As the month ends, let’s carry the awareness of this “bodyguard” or protective energy forward with us. It can serve us well for years to come.

And in this final May 2015 post, let’s look at a powerful way to guard against the common obstacle of overwhelm, which is probably the most common form of self-sabotage. Sometimes we (and that includes me) can sabotage our (my) own creative successes by taking on too much at once. The resulting feeling of overwhelming stress easily leads to avoidance, not knowing where to start, a seemingly insurmountable hill to climb, creative paralysis, or doing nothing well because we’re spread too thin.

When this happens, PROCLAIM and PRAY! Proclaim (that is, state boldly out loud or in writing) whatever permission you need to give yourself: permission to let your light shine, permission to express what the Lord’s given you to express, permission to take time to complete one task at a time, or even permission to create a sanctuary of creativity time and space by putting a “Do Not Disturb” sign on your door, literally or figuratively. Pray for the Holy Spirit to encourage you to pursue your creative passion, to fulfill your call to creative greatness, or to simply bless someone with the creative work you are gifted, equipped, and prompted to do. Pray for the Spirit to open the doors He wants opened to keep you in the center of God’s perfect will and to close the doors He wants closed. Accept and trust in that guidance.

Proclaiming permission to pursue your creativity and praying for the Spirit’s guidance will help you stay on your creative path. Put your whole heart into fulfilling your calling. You’re made in the image of the Great Creator, so it’s so natural for you to love, to create, and to fulfill your personal assignment in the Kingdom of God. Go for it with passion.

Coming in June: Paying Attention to Inspiration All Around.

Tune Up Your Time Mastery

Tune Up Your Time Mastery

I’ve been thinking about time. I’m starting to actually believe there’s enough time for every good thing in my life, including relaxation! This change from not-enough-time to plenty-of-time thinking is an especially well timed, as I’m just finishing up a working vacation in Mexico, following a 4-day retreat!

 

This surprisingly positive thinking seems influenced by four realizations:

  1. Letting go of compulsive perfectionism makes us better;
  2. Patience is easier when the pressure is off;
  3. We don’t have to figure out all our time management issues on our own; and
  4. The help we get reduces stress!

 

When it comes to perfectionism, I find it helpful to embrace the 80-20 rule — that 20% of effort produces 80% of results. For years, I’ve seen this principle applied to everything from economics and tax policy to email management. Nevertheless, I’ve too often ignored it in my life, spending inordinate amounts of time trying to perform every task as if it were a final exam, even striving for 100% on life’s metaphorical pop quizzes! Lowering my standards to 80% on 80% of what I do — that is, reducing my perfectionism while still allowing for excellence where it’s important — means more time for more good things! It also means energy isn’t drained by relentless striving. Devoting the saved time to play or relaxation can also make focused time yield even better rewards because we’re fresher.

 

Less Pressure, Less Stress, More Patience? The second word of Chapter 3, verse 1, of the Book of Ecclesiastes verse is only one letter long but is really important: “There’s a time for every purpose under heaven.” A time implies that, even if the proposed activity serves a great cause, this isn’t necessarily the time. The indefinite article “a” means the time may be tomorrow or next year! The verse doesn’t say “Now’s the time!” I’m more patient with myself (and less stressed) when I know my good idea or worthwhile task can wait until another time!

 

So how do we figure out whether this time is the time for a particular use of your time and energy? An amazing ad’s been running for some time about a fantastic radio station that gives the best advice time management advice ever. You’re invited to call in your questions or just tune in and hear advice given to others like you. I came across the ad yesterday and here’s what it says:

 

[su_box title=”TUNE IN & TUNE UP YOUR TIME ” style=”glass” box_color=”#47142D”]Retro Radio

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

WSDM, the Voice of Wisdom call-in talk show, is broadcasting worldwide, 24/7, with great advice from an all-knowing and eminently qualified host. He wants YOU to call or tune in — first, because you’re the station’s ideal target audience, and second, because the host’s awesome advice will answer questions about time (or anything else) wisely. Whether you’re a first time caller or a regular, you’re encouraged to present questions daily! You have ready access to someone who’s in touch with your reality. He’s been through weakness and testing—he experienced it all and he overcame every obstacle.

WSDM PROMISES, if you live the way the host advises, you’ll get these free gifts:

  • Dog DJ Depositphotos_1780607_xsaffection
  • exuberance
  • serenity, and
  • the remarkable ability to marshal and direct your energies wisely.

The host will also advise you not to allow yourself to get fatigued doing good. He’ll let you know when it’s the right time to work for everyone’s benefit. In fact, if you trust him, WSDM promises you endless energy and boundless strength! So just call in and get what our host is ready to give. Accept his help![/su_box]

 

You may recognize where that ad’s been running for centuries: Galatians 5:22-23 and 6:9-10 and Hebrews 4:16 (The Message).

 

I submit that God/Wisdom/Spirit/the Still Small Voice Within (take your pick) can guide us as to whether now’s the time or not, as well as whether the proposed activity is a “purpose under heaven,” and whether it’s one assigned to us. After all, that voice of Wisdom knows that we need downtime as well as “productive” time (i.e., time spent with an end product to show for it). The voice of Wisdom also knows if the particular task is something that is best done at all, and if so, who’s best suited to do it.

 

But discerning might take me more time that just doing it, you say? Not necessarily!

 

Here are three things you might try to help you tune into WSDM, plus a quick time-related challenge for the week.

 

  1. Set aside Morning Quiet Time. Try reading The Message version of the Bible, which is in a vernacular that’s really down to earth. Think of what you read as God’s opening of a conversation with you. To continue the dialogue, journal your questions or comments to God in equally down to earth words. Then be still, with an open mind and a pen in hand, and take notes from what you hear the voice of Wisdom prompting you to write. (This week, I’ve been enjoying one chapter a day from Galatians and Ephesians. You can quickly find them in The Message version on www.BibleGateway.com.)
  2. Mentally turn on WSDM’s Talk Show whenever you feel stuck. Imagine you’re going to call in and you want to frame your question well by becoming aware of what you need to find out, what you’re bothered about, or what decision needs to be made. In other words, identify specifics rather than fiddling around in generalized anxiety, confusion, overwhelm, procrastination, or repetitive negative thinking. You might explore this by asking:
    1. Where in your body do you feel stuck?
    2. What 3 words best describe how you feel about this issue?
    3. When or where do you feel stuck?
    4. Have you felt stuck like this before?
    5. If so, how’d you get beyond it?

Now try to narrow down your question(s) and present them to the host. You could do this by writing the question, reading it before bed, and sleeping with it under your pillow for a few nights in a row. In the morning, write down any responses you wake up with.

  1. Seek the advice of a trusted and godly advisor, as suggested in The Book of Proverbs. (I’d tell you exactly where but I just used the 80-20 Rule!)

 

Here’s a challenge for those who often struggle with feeling pressed for time. This week play with the concept that there’s a time for every purpose under heaven. Repeat that statement to yourself whenever your self-talk implies a lack of time.

 

Be gentle with yourself, too. If all this seems difficult, just give one idea in this post a 5-minute try a few times in the week and see if you feel even 5% more peaceful about time issues and divine guidance. Or you could even just spend 30 seconds pretending you believe that there’s a time for every purpose under heaven!

 

It’s the beginning of Lent, the 40 days leading up to Easter. Just maybe you’re being called to pick one of these ideas to try for the remaining 39 days.

 

Whom Do Your Priorities Honor?

Whom Do Your Priorities Honor?

“Many of us are afraid to set priorities that honor self. We worry and fear that we will disappoint others by putting our priorities over theirs. To the best of your ability, stay true to your own priorities, and leave it to others to respect you for doing so.” I read this on www.quiltedonline.com/to-do, shortly after realizing that I set my priorities all wrong today.

I drove 3 hours to get from Sea Ranch to San Francisco for what was going to be a 2:00 – 2:30 meeting with our cabinet installer and cabinet designer, because the designer’s priorities were other meetings with other clients as well as commitments in her personal life . . . and because she’s never been available to meet with me at my convenience. Early last week, she’d offered this two o’clock Friday time slot as her only available time over a two-week period.

DSC00772 (3 of 12)To make it to the meeting on time, I called my latte “breakfast,” had to skip a quilt guild meeting, and drove the winding coastal highway assertively, with no rest stop, and no lunch. When I arrived, it turns out she’d gotten there early, inspected the damaged cabinets, and left already. And via email afterwards, she said she didn’t even accomplish what she’d gone there for because it “wasn’t the best day for it.”

I was angry at her, and felt very disrespected. But there’s a lesson here for me!

I wasn’t being true to myself to even TRY to go to all that effort for a half-hour meeting. When I’d prayed this morning about whether to drive down to the meeting, I received some guidance that suggested I not go, but it wasn’t crystal clear. I decided to go—out of perceived obligation and fear that without my input, mistakes wouldn’t be rectified. Not good motivation — and I knew that! Next time, I’ll spend another few minutes listening, and heed what I hear! Then my priorities will honor my true self, as guided by Spirit and my heart.

I’ve also focused this week on the verse saying that there’s a time for every purpose under heaven (Ecclesiastes 3:1). Apparently, today wasn’t the time for the particular purpose which my decision honored, regardless whether that meeting to resolve the cabinet problem was actually a purpose sanctioned by heaven!

Please feel free to share any comments!

Spiritual Quilting is Now Out in the Open

Spiritual Quilting is Now Out in the Open

Depositphotos_7412679_xs
The message of Reap As You Sew: Spirit at Work in Quiltmaking was meant to be shared with other spiritual quilters and creative people.

My first Book Signing and Quilt Show in September and my Book Signing last Saturday at the Women of Faith conference in Portland reinforced that belief. In Gualala, two quilters I’d never met came up to me and each told me she’d found quiltmaking to be a spiritual experience over the years, but she’d never admitted that to anyone! One would usually tell people she quilted “for her sanity,” the other that she was “addicted” to it, because each thought people would think her weird for saying quilting connected her to God or helped her in spiritual ways. The interconnectedness of quiltmaking and spirituality was, for each of them, a private matter and a secret.

But this secret is too good to keep to ourselves!

In Portland, even in a Christian venue, I met women who were both surprised and thrilled at finding there was a book on this topic. Many had seen the larger-than-life poster of the book’s cover in the outer areas of the sports arena where the conference was held, it was the first they’d heard of the book, and they returned to my publisher’s booth at the time of my lunch hour signing. A steady stream of women stood in line to get copies signed, and unfortunately, we had to turn some away without books when my 90 minutes in the booth ended and the conference program re-commenced.

About one-third of the women in Portland got the book for a relative or friend who’s a Christian quilter, some planning to read it themselves before gifting it for Christmas. The other two-thirds, the quilters in the crowd, were excited to find a book on what they’ve personally felt—the connection between quiltmaking and spirituality. They told me about experiencing quiltmaking’s stillness as a blessing and about embuing of their work with prayer, especially while making gift quilts. Some were looking to the book for inspiration, to resume a hobby they’d let fall by the wayside in the busyness of their lives. Some sought ideas on ways to design quilts with spiritual themes or symbolism. I trust that a few relatively new quilters who got the book will find their quilting becoming a spiritual path, and I’m sure that the quilters being given the book this Christmas will be surprised and delighted!

A pastor wanted a copy for a women’s group ministry team.

One young woman, Jennifer, is currently being taught by her grandmother to hand quilt on an heirloom quilt frame that once belonged to her great-grandmother, and she got a copy of Reap As You Sew for herself and another for her grandmother. I was really touched at her soulful reverence and the way quilting is connecting generations of women.

ChrisSmith9 5Most people admired the photos in the book and wanted the print version, but some preferred e-book versions. I was happy to have it available in both formats.

The women wanted to know why and how I wrote the book, and I wanted to hear about their quilting preferences and their creative passions. Many of them not only quilt but also make jewelry, cards, scrapbooks, and music! Our conversations were short, but I hope to hear more from readers about how they individually experience Spirit at work in either quiltmaking or other creative activities. I’d love to share some of your stories, too, perhaps as guest blog posts or through email.

The women who came blessed me, and I, them. I requested that they might be ambassadors for the notion of quilting as a spiritual activity, as well as for the book, telling other quilters about it and posting online reviews. Why? Not just to sell copies, though that’s certainly helpful. But more significantly, I believe it’s important to validate the spiritual benefits of creativity, whether in quilting or other creative endeavors, and regardless of one’s faith or spiritual outlook! It’s good to let this light shine out, unhidden! 

In 2015, I plan to open up a Spiritual Quilters’ Community forum—a place where spiritual quilters can connect with other spiritual quilters, preferably in a members only online venue—where you could post photos of quilts you make that carry some spiritual story or message, or where you might seek advice, or share a touching experience. Please feel free to post suggestions or comments about whatever you’d like to see in such a forum.

Gratitude and Freedom

Gratitude and Freedom

How about trying your hand at a poem of gratitude, giving yourself 5 minutes or less to see what bubbles up when the first letter of each line starts with the letters that spell “Gratitude?”

 

Here’s my Gratitude Poem:

Depositphotos.com/PetarPaunchev Licensed to ReapAsYouSew.com

Thanks to Depositphotos.com/PetarPaunchev,
this photo was licensed to Chris@ReapAsYouSew.com.

 

Great are our opportunities,

Resplendent our God!

Abundance is God’s offer and desire for us,

There for the asking.

I embrace with

Thanksgiving

Unlimited possibilities:

Doing and being,

Evolving in freedom!

 

Please, feel free to post your Gratitude poems as Comments!