my recent syllabus [to keep me moving forward with a rosary of days]

  • Lynda Barry is someone I trust during such times.
    • Her inspirations to “focus on the relationship between the hand, the brain, and spontaneous images, both written and visual” (Drawn & Quarterly) are a syllabus all their own. 💛
  • I am taking inventory as I review my practice.

Create room for flexibility and adaptation, even before you have it all sorted out.

Morgan Harper Nichols
  • A lot of pen-to-paper processing (deciphering whatever is swirling around in my brain) as well as mind-mapping and cutting/pasting words from the content from Right Brain Planner templates.
  • 🔮 It is vital to explore [creative ways] to co-exist with current events.
  • 🚫 Otherwise…we live the same life over and over, a form of death ☠️🪦 …
read and discussed during January-February

I have been told sometimes the most healing thing we can do is remind ourselves over and over and over other people feel this too.

Andrea Gibson, “The Madness Vase”

The lesson for our creativity is simply this: To make our most ambitious creative dreams come true, deliberate practice has to be part of the picture.

Srinivas Rao
currently reading & discussing monthly with a local group

Dare greatly, fall down, and get back up.

Srinivas Rao

  • Any day can be Day One. ➡️ Face forward and trust your pace. 💛
  • Intention looks like keeping a chronicle (as in, always have a notebook at the ready). 📓
  • Prioritizing our desires requires 🗺️ mapping + tracking our progress.

Something happens in your brain when you make a promise to yourself and then break it. The more you break the promises, the more your brain changes its operating patterns.

Hannah Brencher

Caught in the maelstrom of the moment, we forget this cyclical nature of history—history being merely the rosary of moments the future strings of its pasts.

Maria Popova

Thank you kindly for your interest in right brain planning! I am so grateful for your presence and support! ♥