A Few Rays of Sunshine
MARCH 26, 2009
I've been working on a gift for my dear friend Dr. J...
who celebrated a birth~day yesterday!
It all started with a gourd that she saw at the 2008 [Forestville Calabash Festival](http://www.calabashartfest.org/artists07.html)...
So... I got out my gourds, paint, tools, clay, beads, gold & copper leaf, and glitter powder and had a wonderful time creating a piece just for her...
who celebrated a birth~day yesterday!
It all started with a gourd that she saw at the 2008 [Forestville Calabash Festival](http://www.calabashartfest.org/artists07.html)...
So... I got out my gourds, paint, tools, clay, beads, gold & copper leaf, and glitter powder and had a wonderful time creating a piece just for her...
I made my own medallions to match the clay faces on the painting that Dr. J. commissioned me to do for her last year...
I had a lot of fun making the base... I had originally thought the gourd would sit on a tradition oriental black base, but when completed, that idea just didn't give the look I wanted. So... I found this copper ashtray at a local antique store...
Do any of you recognize where that flag at the center is from???
I added a few red glass beads, which I gold leafed and antiqued and attached them with Apoxie Clay... when I turned the ashtray upside down... voilá! I had my own custom base!!!
I added a few red glass beads, which I gold leafed and antiqued and attached them with Apoxie Clay... when I turned the ashtray upside down... voilá! I had my own custom base!!!
One of the things we did yesterday to celebrate Dr. J's birth~day was to have lunch at my favorite dim sum restaurant Yank Sing which is in the San Francisco Financial District...
Just being with Dr. J is a ray of sunshine in itself...
So it was a beautiful day filled with rays of sunshine everywhere!!!
Happy Birth Day Dr. J!!!
Happy Birth Day Dr. J!!!
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Labyrinths provide us with a path to practice change. Some labyrinths have withstood the passage of time for thousands of years. Others are here for just an afternoon, drawn in the sand at the edge of the ocean. Many modern labyrinths were meant to last for years, but because of unforeseen circumstances their time is shorter than intended. And they once again help us to practice letting go and giving thanks for the time they are with us. The Labyrinth of Life at the Sebastopol, California Teen Center reached such place of letting go and is at the end of one chapter and the beginning of another chapter that is yet unknown.

Sometimes... a labyrinth can take years to become a physical reality. In 2018 I met with my friend Deb, to discuss her desire to have a labyrinth on the beautiful land she lives on. Despite our plans and several meetings, listening to the land and finding the right spot, the labyrinth did not come to fruition. Fast-forward five years and in the blink of an eye... it happened!