I was really happy to continue my August reading momentum (and then some) into September! It helped that I had a long weekend away at a friends cabin with no cell service or Wi-Fi to distract me, but I managed to carve out some significant reading time the rest of the month as well.
into the woods (a weekend away in upstate New York and a closer to home hike)
Back in the day (as in, before Instagram) I used to blog more about the things going on in my life. I kind of miss it, because it gave me a record of what I was up to, both in the studio and outside of it. So I’m making this post simply to share that, at the beginning of September, I spent a lovely few days at my friend’s cabin in the woods in upstate New York.
What I’m reading: My Life with Things and Having and Being Had
I started off September pretty much the same way I ended August, reading all the things. As I mentioned over on Designing an MBA, I’m currently in a “gathering” phase, taking in lots of ideas so that I can begin working on a book proposal this fall.
What I didn’t mention in that post was what I’m planning on writing the book proposal about. It should come as no surprise, but I want to write a book on art. Not about the business of art, like I write about on Designing an MBA (though I wouldn’t complain about writing a book about that either) but rather about the power that art can have when we bring it into our everyday lives.
eight books I read in August
I think it’s safe to say I found my reading groove this month. After having a hard time focusing during the early months of the pandemic, it was nice to really dive into some new books. (Ok, so technically I had read The Eyes of the Skin once before, but everything else was a first time read for me!)
The ways I see myself in Kamala Harris.
Note: I decided to use this pic of me wearing my burgundy stacking rings as a nod to the burgundy suit Kamala wore to accept the nomination.
I’ll admit it, I hadn’t really taken the time to learn Kamala Harris’ story until this week. I was team Elizabeth Warren during the primaries, and even after Harris was announced as Biden’s running mate, I was too busy luxuriating in my own smugness (I told a friend back in March that she would be Biden’s VP pick) to really take the time to learn about her. I knew the basic sound bites, of course. But at first, I didn’t take the time to dive deeper.
It was only upon realizing that I was following her niece, Meena, on Instagram that I began to dig into Kamala’s story. And the more I learned, the more I recognized the ways in which I see myself reflected in Kamala Harris in ways I have never seen in another political candidate.
Of course, much has been made about Kamala’s identities as a Black and South Asian woman, and rightly so. She represents people that have thus far not been able to see themselves in the positions of leadership that she has held, and the one she is vying to hold now, and that is incredibly valuable and important.
But these are not the only people Kamala represents. For as much as I supported Hillary (and so badly wanted her to win), even as a white woman, I see more of myself in Kamala than I ever did in Hillary.
For starters, like me, Kamala retained her last name after getting married. While the decision to keep my maiden name was natural to me, I’m still amazed at how uncommon this choice remains, particularly in heterosexual marriages. I can’t speak to exactly why Harris made that choice for herself, but to see a woman in this position who kept her own name speaks directly to my own choice.
Kamala also embodies the idea that not having biological children of your own does not preclude you from nurturing, or caring, or loving, or even mothering. Again, I cannot speak to her specific situation, but as someone who is child-free by choice, to see the relationship that Kamala has with her niece, her step-children, and I’m sure countless others younger than her, affirms what I’ve come to realize over the last number of years in my life – that nurturing and mothering happen in many forms, not just in the traditional role of mother, and that they are all necessary and valid.
And finally, Kamala and I share one more thread, one that I wouldn’t wish on anyone, but one that creates a bond with anyone else who’s experienced it. Like Kamala, I lost my mother to cancer. And, as I learned watching her nomination acceptance speech, I too was profoundly shaped by the mother I lost too soon. Kamala understands the pain of your mother not being here to see your greatest achievements unfold. She knows the ways in which every positive moment in your life and the lives of your family members is twinged by the heartache of loss. She knows, and I know this, because I know it too, what it feels like to be profoundly shaped by a woman in a way that leaves a huge mark, but also a huge hole, after that woman is gone.
That Kamala devoted so much of her speech to pay tribute to her mother speaks volumes about who she is and what she values.
Kamala Harris is a woman shaped by her mother who is rewriting the definition of what motherhood looks like.
She is a woman who is committed to family without sacrificing her own identity.
And she is a woman who understands how to channel loss into empathy and how to stand back up after despair.
I know she is not a perfect candidate, because there is no such thing, but too much attention has been paid to her faults, and not enough to her humanity. Too much attention has been paid to her history as a prosecutor, and not enough to her history as a woman, a daughter, an aunt, a step-mother, a person.
Over the last four years, we’ve seen what happens when we elect leaders who understand the political game, but don’t understand what it means to be human. We know what happens when we set humanity aside.
Learning Kamala’s story this week, and seeing the ways in which it reflects my own, is a reminder that if we want our leaders to govern with humanity, we need to look at them as whole humans. Yes, we can still hold them accountable for policy decisions, but we can’t set aside their experiences as real human beings.
Because ultimately, what we need in our leaders is the capacity to care, to listen, to understand, while at the same time, being unafraid to speak out and be who they truly are.
This is a lesson I learned from my own mother, and it’s one I now know Kamala Harris learned from hers as well.
poppy season, striped vase, and stacking rings
Poppy season may be long gone (it’s always too short for me) but at least I have these pics I took of these pink poppies from my garden in my Elizabeth Benotti vase. (With my stacking rings in Bubble Gum, Light Raspberry, and Deep Ocean.)
succulents and stacking rings
Back in May, after a solid month of self-isolating, I was able to go to my brother’s in Delaware to meet my new nephew! And while most of the trip was spent helping care for a newborn and a toddler, my brother and I were able to squeeze in this photoshoot! My brother, who is a freelance photographer (you can see his work here), came up with the concept and took the pics, while I played the roles of model, nail artist, and of course, ring designer!
string of rubies (the plant) with stacking rings and a handmade ceramic planter
When it comes to the last several months (and the foreseeable future) I’ve considered it my civic duty to stay home and support small businesses on the Internet. So here’s a lovely string of rubies plant I picked up from Concrete Crop on Etsy and a new ceramic planter from Elizabeth Benotti. (Oh yeah, and my stacking rings in Soft Mint, which are available in my online store, in case you want to support a small business from the comfort of your couch!)
shades of green (stacking rings) for summer
I’m not sure if it’s summertime or my ever expanding plant collection, but right now I’m really into all things green. Which is why I’m so excited to release my newest stacking right color, Emerald Green, today!
Shown here with Pale Green and Soft Mint (and my current plant obsession, Monstera Adansonii), Emerald Green adds a lush, verdant green to the mix!
when your rings (and nails) match your painting
When I was photographing the Green Sand stacking rings, I couldn’t help but notice how much they matched this painting that I have hanging over my shipping station. So I pulled the painting off the wall and used it as a background!!
I definitely have plans to do more ring/painting coordination posts, but for now, you can shop the Green Sand stacking rings in my online store!
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