Sunday, April 25, 2010

SANCTUARY LIVING: ESSAYS BY DESIGN

Try Dreaming More With Your Eyes Open
by Janene Kraft

My 19-year-old dreamer, Cameron Kraft--this was not
posed but what he did when I asked what he really wanted in life!

I love to go to bed early just so I can dream. My dreams have always been vivid and I often remember them so clearly that when I awake, I weep at the loss of them.

Can you imagine dreaming of something so passionately that it makes you cry?
Most of us have heard that we can have anything we want if we…

Work hard enough

Go to school

Make enough money

Know the right people

Perservere

But there is really only one thing needed to get what we want—we have to KNOW WHAT we want!

THE DREAM is everything. We have to be connected with what I call our “Passionate Purpose.” Most of us go through life never being consciously, clearly aware of our desires.

Out of fear of being disappointed or lack of belief that we deserve it, we bury our dreams deep in our subconcious and allow the demands of the day to direct our paths. Instead of focusing on the WHAT we get busy with the HOW hoping that the flurry of activity will make us feel important and worthwhile.

But it is our dreams, not our distractions that guide us into becoming the whole, fulfilled, extraordinary people we were meant to be.

What is it you dream of? Do you know? Are you clear?
What is distracting you from living it?

Identifying what it is you’re really here for and eliminating everything that gets in the way is your ultimate gift to the world. Are you wondering what you can do to change the course of humanity? Try dreaming more with your eyes open.

Friday, April 9, 2010

SANCTUARY LIVING; ESSAYS BY DESIGN

ARE YOU PICKING AT THE SHEETS?
Excerpt from the essay, Picking at the Sheets from the book, SANCTUARY LIVING 
by Janene Kraft


When I was a little girl my Daddy took me to see my Grandpa in one of those places we all avoid.

Grandpa George needed the kind of care and attention that Grandma Zola was no longer able to provide. So once a week on Sundays the family would dutifully share our love in the only way we knew how, in a place where only love mattered anymore.

In an attempt to avoid the sadness and boredom that permeated the room, I roamed the hallways of the Home looking for something to get into. Darting in and out of other Grandpas' rooms, I was, admittedly, curious about their varying states of “near deadness.” Though there really wasn’t much to look at, one detail continued to catch my attention room from room. At first I dismissed it as a nervous habit, like biting your nails. Or maybe they were knitting, or believed themselves to be so. But the fidgeting wasn’t gender specific. Like some strange old-people ritual the manifestation revealed itself again and again in small dark rooms, in quiet, unoccupied moments. There, lying amongst the covers, with no one to bear witness, these ancient versions of myself were “picking at the sheets.”

I can’t tell you precisely when I realized what was going on. But I can tell the “knowing” has changed forever the way I view death…and life even more.

For all of us, dying is a process. For those closest to the end, that process involves the body’s intuitive sensing of the spirit letting go. This “spirit lifting” creates a sensation of floating, a detachment from the here and now both physically and mentally in great proportions. Yet while the spirit hungers to separate, the body wills itself to remain. Even while the mind is unaware the act of anchoring begins and the hands, in their last attempts to grasp tightly to the things of this earth, begin their final, desperate act of “picking at the sheets.”

You don’t have to visit a senior center to witness this phenomenon. In fact, the “picking” is closer than you know. Think about the last time you did something with deliberation and conviction. Was it last month or even last year? Now think about the last time you felt agitated, stressed and over stimulated. In the last twenty-four hours? In the past fifteen minutes? Isn’t it ironic that as full as our lives have become there’s a communal sensing that something’s missing. No matter what we do, it’s not enough. We feel displaced and detached from people and places, work and play. Our distraction is evidenced in the way we walk—head awkwardly jutted out ahead of our bodies as if on a frantic mission to find ourselves. And how we speak—incessant, preoccupied text-messaging acronym versions of ourselves. We have dined so long on the superficial that we don’t even know how to digest the real meal. And as our minds are invaded our essential selves are floating out of view. Superficial and Spirit cannot occupy the same space at one time. We are the generation of “pickers,” literally dying to be alive! In our frantic attempt to fill the void our neglected spirits have taken leave.

If you sense that something is missing in your life, chances are you could be right. But searching for it from the outside will never satisfy…

Thursday, April 1, 2010

SANCTUARY LIVING--ESSAYS BY DESIGN


(Real) Curb Appeal
by Janene Kraft


Several years ago I was privileged to work on the team that developed, named, and opened the Kodak Theatre®, home to the Academy Awards®. I’ve never seen so much black as I did during that time. After all, we were working in L.A. In that part of the world, black is the uniform du jour. It’s curious how the wearing of the color black gives one the ability to embody two simultaneous yet contradictory messages—“I am powerful.” “I am playing it safe.” Wearing anything ‘other than’ carries with it the prospect of being analyzed, evaluated…and, God forbid, wrong.

Poking fun at “playing it safe” is what has made the HBO series, Curb Your Enthusiasm, so screamingly popular. In it Larry David (writer, co-creator, and producer of Seinfeld) plays an amplified version of himself in real life. He is droll and dry and anything but enthusiastic. His nonchalance reflects a pervasive attitude of being void of emotion in an effort to avoid feeling vulnerable.

It takes a great deal of energy to suppress the real you. And when you curb your enthusiasm you CURB YOUR APPEAL! In my mind, there is nothing more attractive than someone who knows who they are and is not afraid to show it.

When you’re clear about the inside, the outside follows. It’s no surprise, then, that I love homes that have an opinion. An interesting house is a great indicator that there’s someone interesting dwelling within. It doesn’t have to be fancy. Or my preferred architectural style. Like dogs, great homes are simply studies of the humanity of their people.

Appealing places are never some “wannabe” version of what everyone else is doing. They are true to themselves and their inhabitors. They are original, not ordinary. Stylish, not stand-off-ish.

Real Curb Appeal is an unbridled enthusiasm for life reflected in how you live. If you want your home to look appealing. Be appealing. That’s how it begins. Creating Sanctuary is as much about you as it is your environment. It starts with knowing who you are and being willing to express it in a way that draws people in and makes a lasting connection.