Wednesday, July 14, 2010

Soul Collage Is Beyond Powerful


I don't make a proclamation like this lightly. Soul Collage is one of the BEST tools I have found to not only unlock my creativity, but to work with my intuitive side. It lets me create without knowing what I am creating. Which is something we forget about doing as we get older. We constantly do EVERYTHING with purpose. This is not always the best mode for creativity.

I took this class at The Earth Sanctuary, and have blogged about it previously. The class is taught by Glenda and Sandra - who make the MOST incredible cards, btw. One piece of advice - don't try to make cards like theirs - they are amazing enough to be licensed products, and if you get immersed in trying to make yours as worthy as theirs, then you miss the point of the class . At my last class, I brought my mother, which is a whole other blog post, if you know what I mean.

Here is the process of the class - pull images for a period of time, sort of organize your images and then start creating a collage on one card. I have to go SUPER fast, or I find that I am censoring myself or making my cards with intention, and I want to make them intuitively. After you make the card, it is helpful to journal about it. You may not even know what the images are trying to tell you, which is just fine. Just go with it.

When I made this card, I was sort of scared of it. It is daunting. Fierce. Sort of spooky. This is NOT how most of the things I create look - they are more about happiness, lightness, and color.

I will share with you what I wrote, which is extremely hard, as I do not let anyone read my journals. However, if this helps someone take this class, and learn about the process, it is worth some minor embarrassment. You start each statement with "I am the one who..."

I am the one who feels beaten down by life.
I am the one who has fierceness and fortitude.
I am the one who works tirelessly to get where I need to go.
I am the one who finds refuge in church.
I am the one who feels dragged down at times, tired, and afraid of not getting ahead.
I am the one who is pulling my own cart.
I am the one who feels darkness.
I am the one who is strong.

It is interesting to note a couple of things about the context of this card and what my mind has been processing lately. My Bible study group, through Palmer Memorial Episcopal Church, has been studying Ephesians these past weeks. A few weeks ago we talked about dressing yourself in the armor of God. There is a church in the background. And this man looks a little ready for battle, right? He is carrying a rickshaw - a detail that is hard to see. And I recently read a book about rickshaw drivers and other types of laborers in India. My point is that your subconscious mind is like a machine always processing things - things you may not even know need processing.

I am reminded to stay strong. Stay the course. No matter what my hopelessness can feel like in any moment, it can never equate to the feeling of hopelessness that a man in this situation must feel. And yet, he pulls his cart one step at a time. Isn't that how we get through life? One step at a time. And it helps to have your armor ready.

4 comments:

LoneStarLibrarian said...

I'v taken Soul Collage with Glenda too and found it to be very powerful...I blogged about it here: http://speedoflight-lonestarlibrarian.blogspot.com/2009/11/collage-mind.html

Ultimately, I had to move on from SC because I wanted to concentrate on collage as an art form.

Don't recall where or how I found your blog but I enjoy reading it and seem to be your first subscriber on bloglines.

Cheers,
KeddyO

AllyPally said...

Sometimes I find as an artist that I get bogged down by the product and the stuff. It seems so paradoxical that the essentiality of the process begs the prodigiousness of so much stuff. If I manage to focus on the path and each step where that takes you, I can find joy. To me that feeling of discovery and learning is what art is really about. I suppose we could apply that to the journey of life too.

LoneStarLibrarian said...

from Matisse: Much of the beauty that arises in art comes from the struggle an artist wages with his limited medium. One of the reasons I love collage is that almost anything is possible, and finding out what that wants to be is truly a joy. Cheers again - KeddyO

Molly Ann Quigley said...

I loved all these comments and empirically agree with KeddyO when she says that with collage all things are possible. Great line, and thanks for commenting.