Advent Creative Arts Devotional: Week 2, Day 2

​Tuesday, December 12, 2017:

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“The spirit of the Lord shall rest on him, the spirit of wisdom and understanding, the spirit of counsel and might, the spirit of knowledge and the fear of the Lord.”

Isaiah 11:2

One of the lessons I learned this year is that I can't be in control of everything in my life. Being in control of every situation, emotion, and action can become so tiring. It is necessary to let go and trust and surrender to the belief that God only wants the best for us. He sent the Holy Spirit to rest upon us at all times. If we surrender to the Spirit and allow the Spirit to provide us with the wisdom and understanding and knowledge to move forward when we feel stuck, we take so much pressure off ourselves. Seek the counsel of the Spirit through prayer and wait for the answer to appear. Even if you feel like taking control again!

When I looked up the meaning of “the fear of the Lord,” I found the following: “The fear of the Lord is the beginning of wisdom: and the knowledge of the holy is understanding.” (Proverbs 9:10) This gives me comfort to know that we don’t have to fear the Lord in the basic sense of the word, but that we should continue learning and understanding what he wants for, and from, us.

Prayer: Thank you Lord for giving us wisdom and understanding through the Holy Spirit. Teach us to surrender and wait on the Spirit to lead us. Amen

​Creative Call-to-Action: Create an affirmation that is meaningful to you and repeat it throughout the day and week. Here is an example: “I surrender to the knowledge and wisdom of the Holy Spirit that loves and leads me.”

—Riana Prins​

Creative Arts Advent Devotional: Week 2, Day 1

​Monday, December 11, 2017:

A shoot shall come out from the stump of Jesse, and a branch shall grow out of his roots. Isaiah 11: 1

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This time of year often brings drab views of the countryside. Absent are the hanging baskets of blooms that adorned porches, yards and sidewalks. Gone are the vibrant golds, reds and oranges of the leaves that so gloriously adorned the fall landscape. After getting this scripture passage to contemplate, I drove along the PA Turnpike and interstate to a funeral. At first I thought of how depressing everything looked as the colors grew farther apart. Occasionally a house here and there stood out. The pavement was monochromatic. Only the evergreens were still green. Even the fields that had been filled with corn, hay, soybeans, and lush ground a few weeks ago stood barren where the harvest had been made.

Then some clouds separated to bring back colors; I looked up and saw bright sun, blue sky. I was reminded of how, even in the dark, the sunrise and -set often bring us spectacular and glorious palettes of colors that painters have tried to reproduce. If we focus on the lack of the summer colors, we miss the beauty in a resting world, a world that prepares for next growing season. At the end of each night comes the hope of a beautiful sunrise and a new day.

Our faith is often like that, too. We travel in monochromatic paths for a while. Then something wonderful and hopeful meets us where we are. Perhaps it’s a message from a distant friend or family member, an unexpected promotion or recognition, recovery from an illness. Hold onto those glimpses of sun, the possibilities of a new beginning in the morning, reminders that God has, does, and will provide for us.

The Old Testament prophets came close enough to God to hear what God had to say to them. They listened, they spoke, they hoped, they prayed. This passage from Isaiah spoke of someone yet to come. It gave hope to those who read it. A new king, Jesus, is coming. He may arrive in rather drab surroundings but will provide what we need all the days of our lives.

Prayer: Almighty God, thank you for adding the colors to our lives, in the people we love and meet, in opportunities to minister to others, in times of creativity. Remind us that even in the dark, you are with us and will bring us to a new day. In the name of Jesus, we pray. Amen.

Creative Call-to-Action: Sit quietly for a few minutes. Make a list of all the colors around you.

​—Diane Olin White

Creative Arts Advent Devotional: Week 1, Day 5

Friday, December 8th, 2017

“He will establish and uphold it with justice and with righteousness from this time onward and forevermore. The zeal of the Lord of hosts will do this.”    Isaiah 9: 7b

Do you ever read the Bible and think, “I wonder how God is going to do that?” I try hard not to be cynical (after all, hope is a big part of faith in God),  but it seems impossible to uphold a kingdom of peace with justice and righteousness for one day… forget forever-and-ever-amen. The “peace” we have seen in our day, especially lately, seems to be teetering on the edge of dangerous chaos and complete disintegration. The last line “the zeal of the Lord of hosts will do this”— this seems to be a strange choice of words. The prophet doesn’t say it will be the power of God that will do this, or the army of God, or even the politics of God that will bring peace—it is God’s zeal. God’s fervency and devotion to God’s people will accomplish this peace forever. This “zeal” that the prophet Isaiah speaks of—what is it?

God answers this question at Christmas. It is now that we see the zeal in the flesh. We know from Jesus’ character that this zeal is first and foremost about compassion and love; that it works through broken people and great injustice to make all things right in the end. He joins us in the muck of the messes we make and weeps and suffers alongside us. Born a weak and dependent child in a manger, becoming a homeless rabbi wanderer, lover of sinners, a miracle man. What a strange and beautiful way to bring peace forever-more. 

Prayer: Thank you for your mysterious ways, Oh Lord. Thank you that Jesus was born on Christmas to proclaim your power and glory, and that He does so through love and mercy. Place this zeal of yours within us. Give us passion for the weak and disenfranchised, break our hearts for what breaks yours. Thank you for allowing us to partner with you, as you bring about your peaceful world in the most perfect, powerful, and zealous way. In Jesus’ name, Amen. 

Creative Call-to-Action: Today, be on the lookout for people or things working to bring peace. Take a photo of one example and find someone who may need proof that God is at work, making peace in our world today. Share your photo with them (either on the Facebook post for this devotional, in person, or via text) and proclaim to them “The zeal of the Lord of hosts will bring peace!”

—Merideth Hite Estevez

This is my friend and neighbor, Tom Davis. He’s a Vietnam vet, a “retired” Presbyterian pastor. I say he’s “retired” because since retiring he’s been commissioned as an “Interfaith Peacemaker” of the New Castle Presbytery and has started the “Interf…

This is my friend and neighbor, Tom Davis. He’s a Vietnam vet, a “retired” Presbyterian pastor. I say he’s “retired” because since retiring he’s been commissioned as an “Interfaith Peacemaker” of the New Castle Presbytery and has started the “Interfaith Veterans Workgroup” here in Wilmington—so not really retired at all :) He is also a self-taught photo journalist who reflects the beauty of our city and world through his photographs. He is bringing God’s peace to our little corner of the world... and so LOOK, “The zeal of the Lord of hosts will bring peace!” 

 


Creative Arts Advent Devotional: Week 1, Day 4

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Thursday, December 7, 2017:

His authority shall grow continually, and there shall be endless peace for the throne of David and his kingdom.

Isaiah 9: 7

 The context of this passage is likely Assyria and its looming threat over Judah (or the southern kingdom of Israel). Isaiah’s prophecy is relevant in its own time, as well as in ours because of our Gospel lens. In Isaiah’s time, this “prince” of peace might be Hezekiah who is young and will soon sit on the throne of David. He will avert disaster with Assyria by ruling differently than his predecessors, emphasizing peace and using creative means of resistance to survive an attack (and archeologists confirm this is historically accurate).*

To survive the attack, Hezekiah ordered an underground tunnel for fresh water be constructed, a significant undertaking, and a description matching that of the Siloam Tunnel. Some archeologists have dated this tunnel to the time of King Hezekiah, and an inscription can be found to this day commemorating the meeting of tunnel diggers who were digging from two different ends of Jerusalem’s wall.

What’s peace got to do with it? The story of Hezekiah is one example of a ruler who trusts in God’s provision, clears Jerusalem of idolatry, tries to avert violence and war by skillful negotiation, and uses his God-given abilities for creative resistance against destructive forces—this is a glimpse of peace at work.

For Christians, we see this prophecy of Isaiah as one that also points to a future Prince of Peace, who shows us how to trust in God’s provision, to rid ourselves of idols and worship the one true God, who calls relentlessly for peace, who creatively mocks political and religious leaders as He reorients them to God. Jesus calls peacemakers blessed, and He himself makes peace between God and ourselves through the cross. That is Good News!

Prayer: Lord, I surrender my anxiety, fear, shame, guilt, pride, greed, and bitterness; help me trust that you will provide, that I don’t have to fight the world to get the love I need. Lord, I give up the idols of my heart—my career, my money, my children, my need for approval—and give my life over to you. Help me to forgive friends, enemies, family, and even you, embracing the forgiveness offered in Jesus Christ. I pray for peace in our war-torn world. I pray for reconciliation amongst nations, races, classes, and genders. Empower us, by your Spirit, to creatively resist the work of sin by celebrating and em-bodying the gift of grace. In Christ’s name, Amen!

Creative Call-to-Action: How do we make way for peace, participate in peace, live in peace? Take 5 minutes today and write down the people, places and things you need to make peace with. Simply write them and pray over them, surrendering it to God. Then display this list prominently.

 —Rev. Edwin Estevez

*I am greatly indebted to Dr. Brennan Breed at Columbia Seminary for these insights.

 

 

Creative Arts Advent Devotional: Week 1, Day 3

Wednesday, December 6, 2017: 

and he is named
Wonderful Counselor, Mighty God, 
Everlasting Father, Prince of Peace.
 Isaiah 9: 6c 

As an extrovert, I love talk therapy. Processing my thoughts, feelings, and experiences with an objective individual has been a formative part of my life for years now. Even when nothing particularly stressful or difficult was happening, the act of sitting on a couch and talking to a professional listener has made a big difference in my life. They have helped me realize how I feel, develop courage to overcome hurdles in my path, and (perhaps most importantly) they have helped me turn the difficult times into growth opportunities. 

I never thought much about Jesus being a described as a Wonderful Counselor until a pastor pointed it out to me one Christmas. It’s one of those scriptures you hear read and sung every year, without thinking too deeply about the complexities of its meaning.

But this name, Wonderful Counselor, assigned to the proclaimed Messiah in Isaiah—is one of my new favorite images.

Every counselor has a different style—there are those who make an Olympic sport out of the awkward silences (and leave you to sit uncomfortably with your own thoughts!) There are those who offer wisdom that is so complex and spot-on you spend years unraveling it. There are those who offer wake-up calls and tough love. They are trained to offer you the care you need in a particular moment. Sometimes they are wrong. Sometimes it takes a few therapists to find the right fit.

If He’s a Wonderful Counselor then, Jesus knows exactly what kind of counsel you need, when. He knows when to listen, when to challenge and urge you towards action, and when to simply sit with you in your sorrow. There are examples of him doing all these things with men and women throughout the Gospels. He is THE perfect professional listener; there to guide you, help you grow, and to become who God created you to be. Do you know you have that kind of access to God? 

Prayer: Wonderful Counselor, thank you for always knowing what I need. Help me to listen for and trust your counsel, even when it is difficult to hear. Bless me that I might listen to others with your patience, wisdom, and boldness. In your name I pray, Amen. 

Creative Call-to-Action: Find a quiet and solitary spot to sit where no one will hear or bother you. (The car works great!) Speak (out-loud) to Jesus, seeking his counsel. Ask whatever questions you may have. Be vulnerable. If it feels easier to journal your thoughts, that’s fine too. Pause and listen prayerfully for a response from your Wonderful Counselor.
 
—Merideth Hite Estevez
 

Creative Arts Advent Devotional: Week 1, Day 2

Tuesday, December 5, 2017:

Authority rests upon his shoulders;  Isaiah 9:6b

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Much of my life I have been an authority conscious person, believing things simply because I’ve been told them by someone I have deemed to be trustworthy.  As a young child, those I identified to have authority for me were my parents, teachers, and almost every adult with whom I came in contact. It was an easy world in which I lived with clear-cut boundaries. When my first grade teacher, Mrs. Martin, told me and three friends to go stand in a corner of the room because we continued to whisper to each other even after she had told us to stop, I went to the corner because implicitly I recognized her authority and did not even think about challenging it. Mrs. Martin carried the burden of authority on her shoulders for my first grade class - and every  class she ever taught!

As a youth, those I identified to have authority for me were much the same; yet, my response to them was different, for it was a time of pushing back on those who carried the burden of authority on their shoulders for me. For example, if my parents gave me a curfew that was earlier than that of my friends,  I would split the difference and arrive home late. Needless to say, my parents were not pleased and consequences followed.

Adolescence was a tumultuous time when parents saying “because I told you so” no longer seemed enough, for I undervalued what it meant for them to shoulder the burden of authority for me. I no longer trusted that they had my best interests at heart. This would not change, I became a parent and more fully understood what it means to have the burden of authority rest on a parent’s shoulders.

What I did not understand as a teen is that no human being has to shoulder the burden of authority alone. This is God’s gift wrapped up for us at Christmas: the promised Messiah upon whose shoulders the prophet Isaiah foretold said the burden of authority would rest.

What does it mean for you this season, as you prepare for Christmas, to know that Jesus Christ carries the burden of authority on his shoulders for you? for me? for the world? that any authority for what we say and do comes through him?

Prayer: Pray The Lord’s Prayer deliberately considering its connection with the text from Isaiah 9:6b.

Creative Call-to-Action: Enter into a conversation with someone about who or what has authority in your life. Is God the ultimate authority? If so, how might that change what you say and do?

 —Rev. Anne Pruett Barnett

 

Creative Arts Advent Devotional: Week 1, Day 1

Monday, December 4, 2017: 

Isaiah 9: 6a For a child has been born for us, a son given to us.

One of my favorite recurring themes of our story of faith is how God chooses the day’s most “unlikely” candidates to do His work. Jesse was so sure that Samuel wouldn’t anoint his son David as King that he hadn’t even called him in from working with the sheep (1 Samuel: 16). Ruth proposed to Boaz and claimed her place in Jesus’s genealogy in spite of her being a woman and an immigrant (Ruth 4). Peter was trusted to feed Christ’s sheep and became the leader of His church, in spite of his triple denial on the night Jesus died (John 21:17.) It seems every chapter I read, I think, “There God goes again, turning the world upside down.” I don’t know about you, but I like the way God works.

As the prophet Isaiah foretold, Jesus, our Emmanuel—which means God with us—came as a baby. Not as a mighty warrior riding in on horseback, not as a whirling natural disaster sent to destroy the Earth, not as an angel descending from on high. He came to live and breathe alongside and through us “unlikely” candidates. That’s very good news.

Prayer: Almighty God, thank you for sending your son Jesus to be born a child for us. Thank you for the ways you use and trust us to do your work in this world, in spite of our shortcomings, failures, and weaknesses. Help us to “look with the heart” (1 Samuel 16:7) instead of our eyes, like you do. Help us to have faith in ourselves and our brothers and sisters, and to trust in your guidance and goodness. In Jesus’ name, Amen.

Creative Action Item: Find a picture of yourself as a child. Study the image for at least 5 minutes. Take some time to free write in a journal about what you see anew upon looking at this photo. Do you see any similarities to your “grown-up” self? What emotions does this image bring up for you?  Consider the ways in which God has used you to do His important work in the world since that photo was taken.

 —Merideth Hite Estevez

My brother Mack and his daughter Macy, moments after she was born. (Photo: Sandi Hall McClain)

My brother Mack and his daughter Macy, moments after she was born. (Photo: Sandi Hall McClain)

Creative Arts Advent Devotional

Advent is a time of waiting. In the mania of all that the Christmas season has become, it seems impossible to make time for anything, much less to practice this waiting for Jesus’ birth. Lumina Arts Incubator and Grace Church United Methodist are excited to share a daily devotional that was created with this in mind—to help us all make space and time for the spiritual practices of prayer, scripture study, and general quiet time with God during the most wonderful (i.e. hectic) time of the year. 

Through Lumina, a ministry of Grace Church United Methodist, I have spent time working with artists from all different walks of life, who identify all over the spiritual-religious spectrum. What I love most about this work is watching people connect with their creativity and explore in community how that connection intersects with the spiritual. We hold weekly small group workshops around “The Artist’s Way” a book by Julia Cameron that reminds us, first and foremost, that God is an artist and perhaps, most poignantly, that God loves artists. The devotions we'll be sharing during the next few weeks were written by participants of these groups and our wonderful Grace Church staff. They contain a special Creative Call-to-Action at the end of each weekday, to help you experience this time of waiting with purposeful and active reflection. 

If you don’t consider yourself an artist, I hope this Advent you will be open to exploring these Creative Call-to-Actions at the end of each day, exploring God’s creation with new eyes, opening yourself up to the music and color that is all around us. What better time of year is there to relish in the blessings of God’s great masterwork? What have we been waiting for?

Join us on Sunday mornings at Grace Church (900 N Washington Street, Wilmington Delaware) at 10:25 worship to hear each week’s scripture and sermon/meditation on God’s Word. At Grace you can pick up a hard copy of the devotional and within it's pages you'll find space to take notes in Sundays entry. During or after the service, feel free to write down the things you’d most like to keep in mind as you dive deeper into the scripture throughout the week. Beginning on Mondays, Sunday’s scripture is divided into bite-size pieces to explore daily through a reflection, prayer, and creative call-to-action. On Saturdays we will rest from our devotional practice. As you recharge, be thankful for all the week has brought.

Below is today's scripture. Hope to see you in worship in a few hours! 

Blessings on your Advent waiting! 

Merideth 

___________

Sunday, December 3, 2017:

6 For a child has been born for us,
    a son given to us;
authority rests upon his shoulders;
    and he is named
Wonderful Counselor, Mighty God,
    Everlasting Father, Prince of Peace.
7 His authority shall grow continually,
    and there shall be endless peace
for the throne of David and his kingdom.
    He will establish and uphold it
with justice and with righteousness
    from this time onward and forevermore.
The zeal of the Lord of hosts will do this.

             Isaiah 9:6-7

Attend worship today and take notes on what struck you most about the service. We will meditate and reflect on select verses of this scripture each day this week. 

 

Life is *not* a marathon... or a sprint

Before you tell your life what you intend to do with it, listen for what it intends to do with you.
— Parker Palmer
On a hike in Montreat, NC with two of my best friends on my wedding day. 

On a hike in Montreat, NC with two of my best friends on my wedding day. 

I've never been very good about being casual, especially in regards to hobbies. It came as a shock to some that having never run a mile outside of gym class, I just decided one day to run a marathon (or 3). While some would say, "Hey, I'd like to be more active... take up running... maybe a few times a week...I'll see if I like it." Instead, here's sample conversation between me and my Self--

Me: *reads marathon advertisement on a Starbucks bulletin board* I wonder if I can run 26 miles in a single 4 hour period...

Self: That sounds hard.

Me: Maybe it would help me lose weight...

Self: Not this again.

Me: I guess there's only one way to find out.  *signs up for Flying Pig Marathon in 6 months*

Self: *sigh*

To be honest, I do not know what my inner voice was thinking in that moment. I wasn't listening to find out. This "conversation" was, in reality, a monologue. The force pushing me through those long weeks of training, running through every city I lived in (or traveled to) in my twenties, was not my inner voice. Heck, I didn't even like running. (I still don't.) I remember when I auditioned for graduate schools, I was training for a race. The schedule had me running a long run on the day of my audition at the Yale School of Music. I did the audition and then ran 17 miles on a treadmill in the hotel. I was disappointed I didn't get in the full 20 the program had prescribed. Looking back on the pavement-pounding part of my life, I can still relate to that desire to be headed toward some finish line somewhere. Even now, finish lines regularly speak louder to me than my inner voice. It never occurred to me that this was a problem.

A few weeks back, we here at Lumina Arts Incubator began the deep dive into The Artist's Way, a book by Julia Cameron about creativity and spirituality. A group of artists and I meet on Tuesday nights for 12 weeks, and discuss big questions about creativity, inspiration, faith, and anything else that comes up. The weekly meetings give me energy that lasts for days on end. These ladies (this time it's all women!) are amazingly vulnerable about their process. They share intimate things about their artistic practice, their pasts, their dreams for their future, all prompted by the reading and writing we do throughout the week on our own. 3 weeks ago we were complete strangers, and now I believe we are friends. I'm lucky that my first time leading this group is with folks who really want to share and grow together around these topics. This is the part I love.

Maybe you can sense that there is a "but" coming.

Anyone who has ever been through "The Artist's Way" knows how strenuous the weekly requirements of the program can be.  Everyone in the group is required to do them, including the facilitator. The Morning Pages, which Cameron calls "the bedrock tool of creative recovery", involve writing a 3-page (long-hand!) stream of consciousness journal entry EVERY MORNING. In addition, we are each required to take ourselves on an "Artist's Date" each week, and complete other "tasks" in your journal, which vary week to week. This has shockingly felt like drudgery. It took me a minute (i.e. a couple of weeks...) to figure out why.

Inner work has no finish line. 

You may have heard people say "Life is a marathon, not a sprint." I would definitely have to disagree. What I remember most about marathoning was the exhaustion. I wish there was another word for it, because exhaustion doesn't seem to cut it. After racing, I remember feeling that someone had taken the entire storage of energy deep down in every muscle and depleted it. Sure, you learn how to pace yourself to last the whole race, and certainly the discipline of pushing through fatigue and pain. These are certainly valuable lessons, but not a metaphor for life, in my opinion. (If this is how tired we will be at the end of our lives, then I think we are doing something wrong!)

Life is a hike and the map your inner voice.

Sometimes you're walking uphill in the rain. Sometimes you come to a clearing, sit down and have a picnic. You aren't ever quite sure if the peak you reach after a long climb will be the highest one, so you savor every pinnacle and rest in every valley. There is no finish line, because it is not a race. There are many different trails, each with their own set of hikers, and it will be tempting to follow others out of fear of trusting your own map. Your map isn't something you create yourself. It is given to you. You'll need a community of others to help you read your map, but not everyone you meet along the trail will send you down the right path. Luckily, your map also holds the key to who can be trusted for this sacred task. Still, you may find the way illegible for while, requiring you to sleep under the same tree for many, many nights. Back tracking may be necessary. If you're tired you sit down. If you're bursting with energy you run a sub-8-minute-mile. The way is long and varied and full of turns and terrains. 

I think some of us who grew up in church internalized this idea that life (and specifically a life of faith) is all about that finish line. (Scriptures like Hebrews 12:1 and 1 Corinthians 9:24 come to mind.) This, combined with the individualistic and success-driven culture here in America, makes for an interesting journey through perfectionism and idolatry. I grew up thinking that listening to God's voice was the opposite of listening to my own. I am ashamed to admit that with great self-righteousness, I've completely disregarded the whisper of my inner voice in service to a voice I thought was God's.

Through the Artist's Way, I'm seeing that the more listening I do to this inner voice God gave me, the more I sense God speaking to me.

Don't get my wrong, God's voice is very different than mine. It contradicts, challenges, and urges me down unexpected trails. That is very uncomfortable at times. The act of listening and searching-- in spite of the sometimes painful and paradoxical drudgery of inner work-- that's where the connection, the healing, and the guidance occurs. We need others to help us decipher the beautiful intricacies of our maps. Thank God we do...otherwise this journey would be pretty lonely.

This week I'm thankful for my fellow hikers, who courageously share their journey as artists with me, people I've just happened to have met as we climb this ridge together. Who are those people in your life?

a far-off, half-forgotten country

Music

By Anne Porter

When I was a child
I once sat sobbing on the floor
Beside my mother's piano
As she played and sang
For there was in her singing
A shy yet solemn glory
My smallness could not hold

And when I was asked
Why I was crying
I had no words for it
I only shook my head
And went on crying

Why is it that music
At its most beautiful
Opens a wound in us
An ache a desolation
Deep as a homesickness
For some far-off
And half-forgotten country

I've never understood
Why this is so

Bur there's an ancient legend
From the other side of the world
That gives away the secret
Of this mysterious sorrow

For centuries on centuries
We have been wandering
But we were made for Paradise
As deer for the forest

And when music comes to us
With its heavenly beauty
It brings us desolation
For when we hear it
We half remember
That lost native country

We dimly remember the fields
Their fragrant windswept clover
The birdsongs in the orchards
The wild white violets in the moss
By the transparent streams

And shining at the heart of it
Is the longed-for beauty
Of the One who waits for us
Who will always wait for us
In those radiant meadows

Yet also came to live with us
And wanders where we wander.

"Music" by Anne Porter from Living Things: Collected Poems. © Steerforth Press, 2006. 

Why I'm here: Thoughts on Being Back at Juilliard

The Stairs at Juilliard (photo cred designage.files.wordpress.com

The Stairs at Juilliard (photo cred designage.files.wordpress.com

Yesterday began my 10-day stay in NYC for Lincoln Center Education's Summer Forum. I'm here as a participant in Teaching Artist training, a dream I've had for many years come true. In case you're wondering, a teaching artist is "a practicing professional artist with the complementary skills, curiosities and habits of mind of an educator, who can effectively engage a wide range of people in learning experiences in, through, and about the arts."

Every since I learned what teaching artistry was, I felt called to the work. I always identified first as an artist, but I also longed to "engage a wide range of people in learning experiences in, through, and about the arts," like a teacher. This impulse to share my craft with people always seemed to be tapping me on the shoulder on the tail of each creative impulse.  I liked interacting with the audience just as much as I did performing, and for me that has had many iterations--from teaching college music courses to speaking from the stage at concerts to being a guest in the public school classroom-- yet I've always wanted to stretch my skills. And so this summer, I finally get a chance to focus in, here with the folks who I believe do it best.

Yesterday morning's session began with a welcome and keynote by the Excecutive VP of Lincoln Center Education, Community Engagement, and International, Russell Granet. He had quite a lot of inspiring things to share, but the thing I found myself thinking at the end of a wonderful first day, was the question he asked all of us: "Why are you here?" 

Now, if you've read the paragraphs above you might think you know the answer to this question for me (indeed I thought I knew it myself), but after ruminating, I have a more complex answer.  I am here to deepen my teaching artist practice, for sure, but coming back to NYC, coming back to Juilliard, to open myself up again to inspiration, to be vulnerable enough for growth, that something that hasn't always seemed possible. 

There aren't very many places in the world where the architecture truly captures the spirit of a place, like it does at Juilliard. Upon entering you're met immediately with a seemingly impenetrable staircase. This last hurdle, a treacherously steep uneven Tetris game gone awry, reminded me poignantly everyday what hard work was to get there. (It never occurred to me to take the elevator!) Like so many students there, I felt like an imposter. I'd somehow snuck in under the radar and my main goal was to make sure no one found out I was a fake. I approached the whole experience with trepidation and fear. This fear, which turned into despair, poisoned every aspect of my life during those years--starving myself down to a size 2, compulsive exercise, regularly pulling all nighters studying and practicing, unhealthy relationships. I believe this was not triggered by one specific person or experience, but a conglomeration of all my years of perfectionism reaching fever pitch in a city who's perfection triggers never sleep. Looking back on it now, I'm amazed I managed as well as I did in that state. 

I've been back on campus numerous times since those days, but somehow being here in my old classrooms for an extended period of time for this workshop, perhaps because I'm happier, healthier, and more joyful than ever--it redeems those rough years for me. It might seem odd to say it, but today I found myself remembering the master classes that took place in the room we were in, and now almost for the first time, being able to process and learn the lessons that those teachers were trying to share all those years ago.

They had fallen on deaf ears before, because when you are that scared of failure, learning is not possible. 

I'm indescribably grateful for these opportunities--to have studied here and to be back. My journey wasn't easy, but it was meaningful. And I wouldn't be where I am today without that experience.

So.....

I am here to relish learning and music-making in these hallowed halls like I was never able to before. 

I'm here to share my story so that someone else who may feel this way won't feel alone. 

I'm here to absorb every ounce of teaching artist training I can get, because this work opens me to a special kind of joy that both the world and I sorely need. 

Have you thought about why you're here? (Wherever that may be.) Are you able to be vulnerable enough to learn? Courageous enough to see yourself honestly? Joyful enough to repurpose your pain into growth? I hope so. 

Why the Arts Matter: Compassion

It's not a competition, it's a doorway. -Mary Oliver

The arts are a rare form of pure compassion. And by that I mean the old Latin meaning "to suffer with." They have a unique power to simultaneously connect us deeply with both ourselves and others. What else does that? Compassion does not mean to deny yourself... but to turn inward--to explore identify and experience, to express the depths of who we are, and turn even our pain into something beautiful and useful--being present to someone else. Compassion and art both start within and pivot outward. Even if no one reads your poem or hears your music, the tangibility of it outside of yourself suffers with you. And if others are lucky enough to hear it-- you, your creative act, and your audience become a triad reverberating with understanding and joy, even in great loss or heart break. This kind of compassion makes us human. It quite literally turns our sorrow into joy or magically multiplies our joy with which we began.

The reason I stuttered in the interview from my earlier post, was because I had forgotten. Music for me had stopped being compassion and had become a type of self-centered, fear-based, slavery. I had become a cruel taskmaster pushing myself towards my own arbitrary goals. I had only looked outward. Creativity that stems from people-pleasing is not sustainable. Art requires vulnerability--scary, uncomfortable, vulnerability. Seek ye first approval and you miss out on all the joy and compassion.

Here are some tips for making art an act of compassion and avoiding burnout:

1. Tend to your spirit more than you tend to your technique. As a Christian, for me this means spending quiet time in prayer, journaling, and seeking to understand scripture. No matter your religious practice, find time each day to listen. It is easy to lose touch with how you really feel when the voices of the world are loud. Once you realize how you feel, you may find you need help processing or healing wounds. You may need to seek a professional counselor. Invest in your spirit more than you do your craft, as it is difficult to feel compassion for yourself and others if you are angry, hurt, or even tired. Ask yourself: where does my inspiration and joy come from?

2. Play. Don't just practice or slave away at creating a product. Set aside time to explore. If you find yourself unable to "play" in your own art form, take up another one for fun. Approach whatever you make while you're playing with curiosity and wonder, not judgement.

3. Pour yourself out in service of others. This for me is the quickest and easiest way for me to see how much the arts matter in my world. While the compassion of art sings through even if no one sees or hears your creation, the act of sharing it will go beyond yourself and the joy will spread. Where can you serve those who are less fortunate? Which dark corner of the world can you make brighter and more beautiful by sharing your work?  

4. Join our community here at Lumina Arts Incubator. I found my way out of burnout and fear by joining artists in community, serving others and unleashing joy. For those in the Wilmington, DE area, we have an Artists Way Creative Cluster coming up soon (read more here) and also a peace camp for the children of Wilmington who are eager to meet you. No matter where you live, like us on Facebook for encouraging words and more info about some exciting opportunities for artists of all disciplines coming soon. Join our mailing list here.

You are not alone in your pursuit of excellence. We are all walking through a doorway that is this process, as Mary Oliver reminds us.

The journey is never over, as I seek to remember why the arts matter in a time like this. It feels restorative and energizing to put down the perfectionism and pick up compassion. And shockingly, as I live into this frame of mind, I feel that my playing has improved a lot. When we each sing our own life song, the unique gift that makes us who we are, a deep and selfless compassion undoubtedly pours out with ease. I believe this makes the world, with all it's cacophony, an exquisitely beautiful place.