A conversation with trees

On Sunday afternoon, I decided to go for a walk after lunch. The weather had been nice and I had been for a walk for days.

I choose a path I hadn’t traversed before and as they say, it made all the difference.

First, I was greeted by a bunch of rabbits who were playing in the grass. I tiptoed to take a photo they heard me and ran away except one who looked a the camera and stayed just long enough for me to capture him in the camera.

Then, two unusual colored objects caught my attention and I made a point to climb the hill to check them out. They turned out to be broken witches’ hats.

But when I turned the corner, a tree made me stop in tracks. A mature tree, old enough to be a grandfather of other trees around it, stood proudly at the intersection perfectly balancing its foliage on two arms like an old man with grandchildren on his shoulders.

I stood still in front of it for a while, listening to its leaves rustling in the light breeze. It sounded as if it was talking to me. Often used as a metaphor for life itself, trees are most penetrating preachers (borrowing Herman Hesse’s words). Their message is of strength and endurance; renewal and growth; shelter and being grounded.

Harmen Hesse wrote an essay on trees:

I revere them when they live in tribes and families, in forests and groves. And even more I revere them when they stand alone. They are like lonely persons. Not like hermits who have stolen away out of some weakness, but like great, solitary men, like Beethoven and Nietzsche.

In their highest boughs the world rustles, their roots rest in infinity; but they do not lose themselves there, they struggle with all the force of their lives for one thing only: to fulfil themselves according to their own laws, to build up their own form, to represent themselves.

Nothing is holier, nothing is more exemplary than a beautiful, strong tree.

Often we get sick of our surroundings and want to escape secretly harboring a desire to travel to faraway places to grow and to renew. But trees stand at the same place at all their lives and are still revered.

I walked further and soon after was stopped by another one. This one had a wrinkled trunk like the neck of an old man.

A few hundred meters later another one beckoned me. Now I was on a familiar stretch, how come I had never noticed it before. It had a lump, like a hunchback but it stood proudly, unperturbed by its deformity.

“This is what happens when you take the road less traveled”, I said to myself, “you look at things with a new perspective, you notice things which you wouldn’t on a familiar path, you strike conversations with strangers.”

Kahlil Gibran wrote, ” Trees are poems the earth writes upon the sky.” I think he must have been referring to this tree.

It reminded me of a poem I had read once by Joyce Kilmer:

I think that I shall never see

A poem as lovely as a tree.

A tree whose hungry mouth is prest

Against the earth’s sweet flowing breast.

A tree that looks at God all day

And lifts her leafy arms to pray

A tree that may in summer wear

A nest of robins in her hair.

Upon whose bosom snow has lain

Who intimately lives with rain

Poems are made by fools like me

But only God can make a tree.

The miracle morning routine

I waited for a month before sharing this with you because I wanted to see its full effect before making any recommendations.

More than a month ago I came across a morning routine based on Hal Elrod’s book ‘The Miracle Morning’ which truly is a miracle.

Prior to following this routine, I would get up in the morning and straight away turn-on my laptop and start working. I will have to pull myself away to have breakfast and shower and take a short break for lunch. Needless to say, I was working harder than working at a job and yet my output was less than what it used to be when I was working full time and blogging part-time. On top of that, I was always tired, anxious and was behind in finishing daily tasks I had set up for myself.

Since I started this routine, my days start at a slower pace but I still get much more done. Besides I am attracting all the right things in my life.

The routine consists of six elements:

  • Meditation 10 minutes
  • Visualization 5 minutes
  • Affirmations 5 minutes
  • Journal writing 10 minutes
  • Reading 10 minutes
  • Exercise 20 minutes

The Miracle Morning routine is meant to take about an hour which means you will have to wake up an hour early each day. The first few days are harder but then you get so much benefit that you start looking forward to the morning and do wake up early each day.

The time next to each element is just an indication, you can add or remove time from an element if you think it would be more beneficial to you. Even if you change the times, I still recommend keeping all the elements as they each serve a unique purpose.

Meditation: Meditation helps to clear and center your mind and you start your day without feeling overwhelmed or emotional. You can meditate in pure silence or you can use a recording for a guided meditation. There are several ten-minutes meditations available online. On the days I have a bit more time I like to use the following one.

Visualization: There are so many studies on the power of visualization. With little practice it is easy to master this technique. You can visualize completing your daily goals or achieving your bigger goals. Try to engage your five senses while visualizing them happening.

Affirmations: Affirmations are the positive things that we tell ourselves. They help develop a positive mindset and grow self-confidence and eventually turn up into self-fulfilling prophecies. Each morning I write my affirmation in a small diary. Then I go back and read the previous days’ affirmations. By the time five minutes are over, I am smiling both outside and inside.

Journaling: Writing down your thoughts is incredibly powerful. I write a page a day in my journal. Sometimes it is about what I am feeling, other times about what is happening around me or what I am planning to do. There other choices too. You can write down things you’re grateful for or lessons you learned during the previous day and any new goals or ideas that came to you since.

Reading: Reading something good each morning allows our minds to move in new directions. I keep a good book handy by my bedside to read a few pages each morning.

Exercise: Other than giving you health benefits exercise improves your mood, clears your head, and makes you feel happier. It is great if you can fit exercise in your morning. I do my exercise in the evening.

There you have it, the morning routine I have been following for a month now. Hal Elrod encourages to try it for at least 30 days to see the benefits. I can assure you, that you will start seeing the benefits after the first week.

Getting started might be hard, but once started I am sure you will not break the routine. It is that good.

Mixing words with images

For some time I have been trying to figure out a way to blend my two passions – writing and drawing. I found the above picture in my papers today and was taken over by its beauty.

I don’t remember where I got it from so can’t give credit to the original creator. But they say imitation is the best compliment you can give to an artist, so I tried to recreate it. Twice, in fact, changing the words each time.

The image is nowhere near as good as the original but I am happy with the first attempt.

I thought the writing around would be hard but it was super easy. I just needed to keep rotating the notebook.

I enjoyed the process so much that I went for the third one, this time finding another figure and word to match her pose.

I can say today has been super productive.

Art that is burned daily…

I happened to be at the National Gallery of Australia yesterday when I noticed this statue in the main hall and was immediately struck by the concept.

The statue is set in a continuous cycle of melting and recasting representing life and impending death and possible resurrection.

It is made of wax and was burned like a candle, inside the gallery, for six months.

It is made by a Swiss artist Urs Fischer who uses wax a lot as material. Fischer has been described by the arts and culture magazine Vault as “internationally celebrated” and one of the most significant contemporary artists working today. He has been displaying his work all over the world since the mid-1990s.

National Gallery of Australia acquired this statue for one million dollars and it has been on display since mid-March 2019. It had been ignited every day till mid-August. Its head had fallen off as one piece and lay on the platform. Miraculously, the arm carrying the smartphone has escaped the flame.

Mostly the works of art are made to be permanent. Sometimes they are ephemeral. But this, new acquisition of the gallery both. Its debris will be sent to Zurich to be re-casted from its mold and installed again in the gallery and the process of burning and melting will start again.

What made me stand there in amazement is the shift in the art in the 21st-century. It is not static, it is alive and always changing, reflecting the world in which we live.

The statue is the depiction of the lauded Italian art curator Francesco Bonami, a friend of Urs Urs Fischer who is sanding on top of an open refrigerator stacked with fruit and vegetables all made of wax. The figure is holding a mobile phone, in a pose so typical of our era.

You can watch the burning of the sculpture by clicking this link.

Through disappointment comes clarity…

I think the exact quote is:

The beauty is that through disappointment you can gain clarity, and with clarity comes conviction and true originality. 

Conan O’Brien

It took me six months and hundreds of dollars worth of courses to get this piece of clarity which I am happy to share with you for free.

An artist’s blog is her sketchbook, diary, scrapbook, studio, and gallery. It is a place to put her work out there in the universe without restraint or judgment.

Gone are the days when artists would share just the finished work while carefully hiding the messy process of creation. Today’s audience wants to know about the actual process of making art. They want to see raw work, the artist’s hands smeared with paint, her floor covered with crumpled paper.

This is what I will be sharing with you from now on.

The other clarity was about productivity.

How would I know my day has been productive?

I have finally figured out if I have something to share on the blog (whether it is a paragraph, a quote, a sketch, anything) I have been productive.

Daily dispatch is the only way to make sure that I have not wasted the day. I am accountable to my audience.

If I live by this rule, then I will be working on something that will go on the blog from the start of the day. I am free to do whatever I want to do each day. Whether I want to write an article or a story or even a poem or whether I feel like sketching, painting, or making a travel journal. Or it might just be my thoughts about a book I am reading… they all count. The rest, so-called ‘work,’ is just noise.

The above canvases are this weekend’s work; this post is today’s.

Future Library

In the north of Oslo, a forest is being planted which will supply paper for a special anthology of books to be printed in 100 years in 2114.

Planted in 2014, this forest is the brainchild of a Scottish artist Katie Paterson, who wanted to create an original library of 100 manuscripts from established authors, to be printed 100 years in the future.

In an interview to CNN she said:

I was on a train doodling and drawing tree rings and I just made a very fast connection between the rings and chapters in a book, and the idea of trees becoming books in the future and growing over time.

[…]

And so I imagined this forest, that embodied time and the authors’ words, growing over a century. And each author’s voice became like a chapter inside the growing rings of the trees. That was many years ago, but I never thought that it was actually going to happen.

Between 2014 and 2114, one writer every year will contribute a text, which will be held in trust, unread and unpublished, until the year 2114. The manuscripts will be stored in a specially designed room in the new public library, Oslo.

Five years ago, Margaret Atwood, became the first writer to participate in the project. Her book is titled ‘Scribbler moon,’ and she believes that readers in 2114 may require a ‘paleo-anthropologist’ to decode some of it, because of how the language would have evolved over the course of a century.

Atwood was not allowed to show her book to anyone. She flew with it to Norway and tied it with a blue ribbon, hoping that she wouldn’t be arrested if a Customs Officer asked her to open the box and she refused.

The Wall Street Journal

Other contributing writers to date include David Mitchell (2015), Sjón (2016), Elif Shafak (2017), and Han Kang (2018).

For the full story go to CNN.

To me, the whole project is a tribute to the written words. Written words are the only thing that stays long beyond its creator.

That is one reason to make art.

Another thought; aren’t forests like libraries, and each tree a book.