LEFT-Y or RIGHT-Y?


There are those of us in the Studio who are often dyslexic regarding the characteristics and behaviours attributed to ‘right brain’ thinking vs. ‘left brain’ thinking. We surmise that we may not be alone in this confusion. So, as a quick reference, for whatever inspirational adventure you may be pursuing; we offer the following clarifications:

LEFT BRAIN FUNCTIONS
Uses Logic
Detail Oriented
Facts Rule
Words and Language
Present and Past
Math and Science
Can Comprehend
Knowing
Acknowledges
Order/Pattern Perception
Knows Object Name
Reality Based
Forms Strategies
Practical
Safe

***THIS IS FUNNY: In typing this entry for the blog post, my eyes read ‘Left Brain Functions’ but my neuroglia (brain matter) translated it to my typing fingers as ‘Right Brain’. Thus, I typed the exact opposite of the functional meaning! That major TYPO could have caused massive confusional hemorrhaging.

RIGHT BRAIN FUNCTIONS
Uses Feeling
“Big Picture” oriented
Imagination Rules
Symbols & Images
Present & Future
Philosophy & Religion
Can “get it” (i.e. meaning)
Believes
Appreciates
Spatial Perception
Knows Object Function
Fantasy based
Presents Possibilities
Impetuous

RELEASE YOUR CREATIVE DREADLOCKS

Artist: Don Smith

Holy Man wearing dreadlocks covered in ash,
During the Hindu Festival of Shivaratri
Kathmandu

On January 3rd, one in this Studio woke early in the morning. 4:20 am seems to be a time the winged monkeys from the Wizard of Oz like to appear bringing with them a sense of dread and displaced fear of the future. The Buddhist’s call it ‘Monkey Mind’; meaning thoughts are unsettled, restless, confused and uncontrollable. Monkey Mind (the uncontrolled thought) rampages through the forest (the mind) jumping from tree to tree and creating a sense of tension and upset. Taking simple deep, restorative breaths will often calm the monkey mind. Focus entirely on the inhale. Focus entirely on the exhale. Observe intruding thoughts but let them flow down the river without engaging them. Return your focus back to your breath. Inhale. Exhale. Slowly. Deliberately. Breathe. Just Breathe. That was my usual antidote but I had a very hard time keeping my focus on the breath so instead I picked up a new book, Jill Badonsky’s The AWE-manac. I opened it randomly to Page 13 where she introduces the possibility of having some fun with writing a Haiku. The Haiku comes from the Japanese tradition of poetry and is comprised of seventeen syllables in three unrhymed lines of five, seven and five syllables.

I reached for a scrap of paper and the pen I keep on my bedside table. The Monkey’s from Oz were already calming down in the trees. My focus had been diverted from their untamed tantrums to figuring out a Haiku. Here is what appeared on the page:


Haiku: Release Your Creative Dreadlocks

Dread imprisons Lust
Lust longs for AWE-some Passion
Passion destroys Dread

So next time the Monkey Mind takes you prisoner, give this a try.
Write a Haiku.
1st line = 5 syllables
2nd line = 7 syllables
3rd line = 5 syllables
Surprise yourself!
Allow the poet inside to swing from the trees in
the Forest of Imagination,
kissing the monkeys as you go!
-Royce-

HOPE

Artist: Cielo


"I believe the whole key to Life

Is the simpliest thing in the world.

You have to have HOPE for the Future.

Once you loose it, and it never returns,

You're done."





A MUSEologies Studio 'coffee quote' by TT.
He comes up with absolute jewels!

THE POWER OF WORDS

Photo by: Joel Sartore


This morning,
words streaming through my head woke me out of a deep sleep.
I found myself smiling.

In the dream,

words were dancing with each other on gigantic polished rocks
that tumbled across a beautiful pristine river
as though they had fallen from the sky.
I knew this river was high in the Sierra Nevada Mountains for
I have crossed it more than once on a hot summer day.
The words had arms and legs; each one alive with its own identity.
The words stretched down the river like a glorious glistening ribbon
creating sentences which, in turn, created dazzling concepts
which, in turn, spoke to my heart and made me smile.

Thank you Brian. You have made my day!

You can’t begin to anticipate
all the good things that may happen to you today.”
-Brian Narelle-