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                        Each
                        month, Dana Reynolds shares her life-transforming
                        thoughts, ideas, and sacred imagination based around our
                        "theme of the month."  Dana is a visionary Spiritual Midwife, who
                        devotes herself to helping women birth their creative
                        gifts into the world. Explore, Express, Imagine
 The world of creativity is a natural place for small
                        children to inhabit. The next time you are in a park
                        observe the way the toddler explores the playground.
                        Notice the way she engages all her senses as she spies a
                        bright red leaf blowing across the grass, chasing it
                        laughing with delight. Soon she catches it, touching it
                        eagerly while turning it over in her small chubby hands
                        to examine its texture and appearance. She sniffs its
                        curly edge and then gently licks it to see what it might
                        taste like, before letting it go to watch it catch the
                        autumn breeze signaling the game to begin again. The toddler’s sensual exploration of the world is
                        the doorway to creativity. Children can help us to
                        remember what it felt like to be bold and unafraid to
                        explore the unknown. The innocence of the child, the
                        purity of heart, and the uncontaminated sense of wonder
                        of the child’s imagination are key ingredients to
                        creativity. Perhaps a way for us, as adults, to
                        recapture our innate creative spirits is to observe
                        children at play. Several years ago I taught a series of Saturday
                        morning experiential art/craft classes, Explore. . .
                        Express. . .Imagine, for parents and their children
                        at a local art gallery. The concept was to bring
                        children and parents together, propose a creative
                        challenge to explore, provide a variety of materials to
                        experiment with, and make a place for their imaginations
                        to co-create together. The metamorphosis that occurred
                        for the parents from the first class to the last was
                        astounding. In the beginning the adults were timid and reserved
                        about using the materials and "diving into"
                        the process. The children, aged five to seven, were
                        eager and uninhibited as they glued sticks together to
                        build a time machine, or pasted strips of newspaper to a
                        balloon to make a papier maché mask. Over time the
                        children seemed to reactivate a spark within the parents’
                        creative souls. Soon they were cutting, pasting,
                        painting together to create a symphony of color and
                        form. Through the children’s total trust and abandon
                        to the process, the parents were led to a place of
                        remembering the joy of play and uninhibited
                        self-expression. The result was an extravaganza of
                        creations including maps to imaginary places, and
                        mythical beasts made of paper and dryer lint. Children are wonderful guides to remembering. To
                        protect and nourish our children’s creative spirits we
                        must remember ourselves what it felt like to squish
                        fingers into wet dirt to make mud pies. We must reclaim
                        the excitement of letting go of a red balloon only to
                        watch it disappear in the bright blue sky. Just as children can help us to remember our playful
                        creative selves. . . we can help to foster creativity in
                        children. Here are a few suggestions for encouraging the
                        young people in your life to explore, express, and
                        imagine their world. Explore: Read to a child. Go to the
                        library and bookstores together. Books are a gateway to
                        the exploration of a myriad of topics. Engage the child’s
                        interest through picture books, vivid imagery, and
                        stories. Make up stories together while driving in the
                        car. Go to museums, art galleries, musical concerts,
                        places that will feed a child’s desire to create.
                        Point out color, sound, shape, and form. Engaging in
                        these activities will help to keep the door open to the
                        child’s senses of wonder and observation. Express: Gather simple art materials;
                        crayons, tempra paints, paper, glue, magazines for
                        tearing up, clay, sticks and string. Create a safe place
                        for a child to make a mess, to freely express what you
                        have explored together. Encourage uninhibited expression
                        with the materials. Transform a hallway in your home
                        into a gallery for the child’s artwork. Purchase
                        several inexpensive plastic box frames to display the
                        child’s creations. Honor his/her outpouring of
                        creativity with a special place of display. Imagine: Create together. Color outside the
                        lines. Encourage the drawings of purple trees and green
                        fire engines. Turn things inside out and upside down.
                        Remember the way the toddler examines the red leaf? Look
                        at things from a new perspective. Nourish the
                        imagination through storytelling, tent building, and
                        noise making. The creative world of the child is an endangered
                        place these days. It’s easy to pop the video into the
                        VCR to "entertain" a fidgeting youngster. Soon
                        the thumb goes into the mouth and the young mind goes on
                        automatic pilot as the programmed images play out before
                        the mesmerized child. Videos, TV, computer games, all these things have
                        their place but are often used as pacifiers for the
                        child who is restless for creative expression. The next time you experience a youngster acting
                        bored, turn on some classical music and get out the
                        crayons and paper. Invite the child to draw or color
                        what is heard and seen inside the music. You will be
                        amazed, and you might also remember how it feels to step
                        through the doorway into the world of imagination. 
                        You are
                        invited to submit your story and accompanying
                        photos to be considered as a feature for the Sacred
                        Imagination column. E-mail me at dana@sacredimagination.com
                        for details. Copyright© 2001 Dana
                        Reynolds.    
                        Read
                        Dana's Past "Sacred Imagination" Columns: October
                        2001 - "Seeking Sacred Alchemy" September
                        2001 - "Invoking Your Muse" August
                        2001 - "The Blessings of Daily Bread" July
                        2001 - "Entertaining the Dream Visitor" May
                        2001 - "Embracing the Whole:
                        Choices for Conscious Living" April
                        2001 "Nourishing the Souls of the Children" March
                        2001 "Opening the Senses to Beauty" February
                        2001 "The Eyes of Love" January
                        2001 "Patterns of Authenticity" December
                        2000 "Finding Peace in the Fields of Time" November
                        2000 "Cultivating Gratitude: Heart-Hugs and Prayer
                        Leaves" October
                        2000 "Journey to the Center - The Sacred Mystery of
                        the Labyrinth" September
                        2000 "The Heart and Craft of Healing" August
                        2000 "Transforming Life’s Challenges into Beauty and Story" July
                        2000 "Sacred Spaces Invite the
                        Muses of the Soul" Read
                        Dana's Soulful Living Feature Articles:
 Visual
                      Prayers Intuition
                        and the Sacred Imagination: The Dance of Co-creation 
                        
  For ten years, Dana Reynolds has
                        been facilitating women’s spiritual presentations and
                        retreats nationwide. Her work as a Spiritual Midwife,
                        one who assists women as they birth their creative gifts
                        into the world, is the foundation of all her endeavors.
                        Her background as a visual artist and writer enriches
                        her Spiritual Midwifery: Birthing the Feminine Soul
                        workshops.
 As the creator of an art making
                        process known as visual prayer, Dana teaches
                        women how to combine ritual with sacred intention to
                        create altars, collages, spirit dolls, and other
                        touchstones. The creation of sacred spaces is also
                        paramount to the Spiritual Midwifery experience. Her
                        web-site http://www.sacredimagination.com
                        offers samplings of her visual prayer collages, poetry,
                        and a workshop catalogue. 
 Dana is the author of the
                        whimsical and colorfully illustrated book, Be An
                        Angel, a co-creation with illustrator and graphic
                        designer, Karen Blessen, (Simon & Schuster). Her
                        essay, Visual Prayers is included in the
                        anthology, Our Turn, Our Time: Women Coming of Age, edited
                        by Cynthia Black, (Beyond Words Publishing). 
                         A trained labyrinth
                        facilitator, Dana incorporates the labyrinth and other
                        spiritual wisdom into her retreats and workshops. She
                        recently traveled to Chartres and Vezelay Cathedrals in
                        France to gather information pertaining to ancient
                        sacred mystical traditions. She currently lectures on
                        such topics as spiritual midwifery, sacred journal
                        keeping, feminine spiritual wisdom, and the early
                        Christian women saints and mystics. Dana’s life follows the
                        spiral path from rim to center and back again. She looks
                        for the sacred in forgotten places and openly embraces
                        the great Mystery of life. Guiding women to the
                        discovery of their creative inner gifts is the passion
                        that fuels her soul.   |