Art: The Painted Doors

Lili and I recently visited the home of our friend Q for an art-making, long-walk-taking afternoon. When we arrived, we discovered that Q (who prefers to remain anonymous) has been covering his room with a growing collection of calligraphic graffiti. I took a few quick photos, which give an idea of what it looks like.

Turning one’s space into an evolving work of art is fun. It can also stimulate a lot of growth, and helps build feelings of ownership and engagement. This can be especially important for people who typically feel invalidated, powerless, or dissociated.

We can apply this concept in many settings: schools, public spaces, homes, offices, prisons, and more. The key is that the people that actually live or work in a particular place are encouraged to alter the space in their own way, on an ongoing basis. If direct alteration isn’t allowed, covering surfaces with paper, wood, canvas, or dry-erase/chalk board can work as well.

Changes don’t have to be all-encompassing. Even small, well-marked areas designated for open alteration can make a big difference. In fact, it’s pretty easy to implement in a way that will work almost anywhere. In my experience, the hardest part is to get ourselves (and others) to relinquish a little bit of our perceived environmental control… which I think is a worthy endeavor and reward in itself. Continue reading Art: The Painted Doors

Donating to Nonprofits

Exploring the popular narrative that blindly giving money to nonprofit organizations is “better” than giving to human beings.

Today’s “Homeless Initiatives Newsletter” from the City of San Rafael, CA features Lynn Murphy, the SRPD’s Mental Health Outreach Liaison. I think Lynn is great, and my professional interactions with her during my own homeless outreach work were very positive.

In the article Lynn says, “…when you see someone panhandling, rather than give money to that person, consider donating to an organization which helps homeless people with services. Sometimes panhandlers don’t use money wisely.”

I would add: Sometimes nonprofits don’t use money wisely either.

Continue reading Donating to Nonprofits

Art: Chinnici’s Phoenix

"Chinnici's Phoenix" drawing by Narayan KhalsaChinnici’s Phoenix” by Narayan Khalsa (pen, pencil, and pastel).

This is another older drawing from around the same period as “Seedling.” I made it in honor of Peter Chinnici, a mental health practitioner who gave me support at a critical time. Peter had a tattoo of a phoenix with Hebrew letters, which he explained as the symbolic foundation for his personal philosophy of service, growth, and rebirth. I took the basic elements of Peter’s tattoo and reinterpreted them in this piece.

Conflict

A simple mistake: Thinking conflict will make things better.

A worse mistake: Thinking things are better just because there is less direct conflict.

Evil– real evil– thrives unnoticed in the cracks between such distinctions.

Continue reading Conflict