Saturday, December 31, 2016

2016 Burndown - and Happy New Year

I'm not much of a resolution-er.  I think we can change our lives moment by moment no matter what the calendar says.  I think most people who know me probably understand how that works for me.

Even without resolutions, I still take the time every year to reflect on what a total transformation 365 days can have on life. I've had a couple of major transformations in merely a year, but I think 2016 is the biggest.  There are so very many reasons, but it started out like this:

On January 1, I woke up and I thought I knew what the Rest of My Life was going to look like.  32 days later, everything I thought I knew burned down around me as I watched the Rest of My Life walk out of the front door.  It was tempting to stand still and burn with it; Ani DeFranco reminded me, instead, that I could "dare to rise up from the ash."

2016 was hard for a lot of reasons, the Rest of My Life not withstanding.  Transitions in family, in professional identity, in self identity, in relationships with friends old and new, in relationship with myself - all this contributed to what made the weight of 2016 nearly crush me.  All the details are not important unless you were there; if you were there, we need not continuously remind ourselves.

The significance and impact of this year is as profound as it was challenging, though.  In multi-dimensional ways, I have been the beneficiary of heartache.  I was battered and bruised, even broken sometimes, but I healed better, stronger, braver.  Everything is on the upswing now, but it wouldn't be without the brush fire that cleared my path.

To honor the brush fire, to truly make peace with what this adversity brought me, I've spent the morning thinking about what parts of 2016 need burning.  What is still in my way?  What must I let go of?  What can I transform into ash?  What must I hold onto?

In 45 minutes, I'll go off grid for most of the rest of this day, to build a fire in a new back yard.  I'll burn the heartache, the anger, the bitter, the ugly.  I'll burn the missteps at work, the unhealthy expectations, the disappointments.  I'll burn down what felt like rejection, what was rejection, what felt like rejection, but actually wasn't.  When that is all gone,  when I've let go of claiming all that hurt me, or haunts me, I'll reach into the remnants of that fire, and pull back a piece of wood with life still left.  That piece of wood is everything wonderful about my life, everything I couldn't have or be if not for this year.

It's the reality of friends who stayed nearby even when I needed to go it alone.
It's three 1,000 year friends I found on a river in canoes.
It's the bond of friendship with someone who found me broken, but let me mend myself.
It's the potential of an incredible love and family I'm building with someone I never expected to find.
It's the space to grow into new opportunities in the industry and the community.
It's the fuel for the things that will come in 2017 that I can't possibly anticipate.

Tomorrow, I'll start a new fire with that piece of wood, and some part of that new fire will become the next fire, and the next, etcetera and so on.

It's a nod to the cyclical nature of life.  It's an acceptance that when life burns down, it's not a loss but clarity.  It's a reminder that the best things that happen in life can only happen when you've made space for them.

Be a phoenix, my friends, and rise up from the ash.

Happy New Year, and many blessings in 2017.

Shakedown dreams walking in broad daylight
Three hun-dred six-ty fix de-gress
Burning down the house
It was once upon a place sometimes I listen to  myself
Gonna come in first place
People on their way to work baby
What did you expect
Gonna burst into flame
-Talking Heads

Monday, October 24, 2016

Nani's and Michael's toast

As I did for Sara's and Jeff's wedding, I'm publishing the written version of my toast from the wedding.  Per usual, the version I delivered was slightly altered and adlibbed, so that I could be in the moment instead of my head.

As I said on Saturday night, I love, adore, and treasure you both, Michael and Nina.

Be well and tremendous love,
Nish 

Good evening, everyone.  For those who dont know me, Im Manisha, Ninas oldest sister.  Except, Nina is not what typically I call her.  I call her Naniben.  Nani - baby.  Ben - sister.  Naniben. Baby sister.

 

Tonight, I see her sitting there, a grown person who just married her best friend a couple of hours ago, a strong, smart, sassy, gorgeous woman, but even still, the fact remains, shell always be my baby sister.  

 

Nina and I have a solid sisterhood, and very close friendship.  We have always confided in each other and asked for advice.  So, I knew something in Ninas world had shifted very shortly after she came home from her first break in college.  She had a long distance suitor at the time, but all of her stories revolved strangely around this boy from Long Island, a charming, funny, bookworm with the surname: Mogavero.  Sara and I teased our 18 year old sister about her boyfriend Michael.”  “My best friend,” she would quickly correct.  Sara and I would glance at each other as if to say yeah right, just a friend.” 

 

Except now, all these years later, its clear to me that in those moments, all three of us were all right.  Michael is her best friend, yes, but never just a friend.”  As Ive watched these two come into their own, I see a steady partnership has emerged - a strong, responsible, and steadfast partnership.

 

You know what else  I see when I watch them, though?  I see a funny, solid, fulfilling friendship. Michael and Nina live for adventure, and know how to find, make, and have fun.  They are playful together, often affectionally and gently teasing the other.  They make each other laugh all the time.  They listen, and take each others concerns seriously.  Every chance they have, they find things to do together  - and most importantly, they enjoy each other while they do it - kayaking, spearfishing, traveling.  As any pair of good friends should, the two of them continuously remember, explore, and identify with the things that made them even like each other in the first place.   

 

To Nina - Nani, I love, adore and treasure you.  I look up to you as much as I look out for you, and I am so happy to see you married to your best friend.

 

To Michael - Brother, I love, adore and treasure you.  If I could have designed a partner for Nina, it would have been you.  

 

To both of them - Michael and Nina, love, adore and treasure each other.  Protect each other from the world, but protect your friendship above all us.

 

So now, if everyone could please raise their glasses, a toast - to Nina and Michael.  May you remain fabulous friends forever.  Congratulations.

 

 





C'est fini


If you're friends with me on facebook, you haven't escaped knowing that, over the last year, I've worked on an ocean themed ceramic set to be displayed at Nani's and Michael's wedding.  The wedding came and all twelve pieces made it unscathed!  :)  The set up turned out phenomenonly. 

A thirteenth last minute item, a write up about the project and me (written by me), was printed and framed to be displayed with the pieces.

For anyone who is interested in that writing:

The dusty, messy, unmanageable earth has an unlimited capacity to fascinate me.  In my life, Ive felt perpetually compelled to touch muck: silt at the bottom of a pond, broken shells mixed into wet sand on the shoreline, or mud that forms in the divots of front yards after summer rain.  Its not surprising then, that my love affair with ceramics is unrelenting.

 

I returned to the studio about eighteen months ago; six months into my return, Michael and Nina were engaged.  Shortly after their engagement was announced, they asked me to incorporate my work into their wedding reception.   At the time of the request, Michael and Nina had few specifications, and any time I asked them for guidance, they assured me: We trust your vision.  Do it how you see it, and it will be exactly what we want.

 

        Hows that for pressure? 

 

After considering the options, I set out to design a new series for them that would encompass a celebration of the love affair these two have with each other and lifea love affair, it seems, that is not unlike mine with the earth. In preparation, I spent several months thinking about the two of them, and not about the series.  What do I know about them?  What do they love about each other?  How do they live their lives?  After searching, I realized the answer was always the samethey adore adventure.  

 

Their newest adventure before the engagement was a recent relocation to Miami, and the most consistent part of their lives after that move was a tremendous amount of time spent on the water.  It seemed my baby sister and Her Love found peace kayaking, sailing, spearfishing, and snorkeling; the two were clearly drawn to the ocean.  

 

Therefore, this series came into existence as a nod to their seafaring; it is twelve structures depicting a coral reef, complete with the fish that swim through them.  The vagueness of form is intentional, a gentle acknowledgment of the ocean rather than a realistic replica of their Miami sea.   As we celebrate the beginning of Michaels and Ninas new life, their willingness to take risks, and their ability to move through the world on their own terms, I invite you to explore these pieces as you wish; please find the wonders of the ocean as they emerge from the muck.

 

Michael and Nina, I thank you for trusting me with this project.  Congratulations, and may the Gods and Goddesses of the sea always bless you.

 

With tremendous love,

Manisha


Congrats, Nina and Michael!