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A Spiritual Artist with Christopher Miller is a podcast series that shares stories of enlightenment and growth from conversations with today’s spiritual artists and thought leaders. An artist is defined as anyone that is consciously connected, present and inspired while practicing their discipline. Conversations with guests explore how making art engages us in emotional, wholistic and spiritual growth. Christopher Miller is an artist, writer and speaker in Dallas, Texas.
The podcast The Spiritual Artist Podcast is created by Christopher J. Miller. The podcast and the artwork on this page are embedded on this page using the public podcast feed (RSS).
In this heartfelt conversation, CJ Miller speaks with transformational creativity and grief coach Susie Stonefield, who believes that “the wound is where the Light enters”—a quote from Rumi that guides her entire practice. Susie helps clients hold their grief through the healing practice of art journaling, which she sees not just as a creative outlet but as a form of spiritual practice. Rather than striving for perfection or hanging something on a wall, her work invites people to make space for their wordless heart to speak—to witness their emotions without judgment and transform pain into beauty.
Together, CJ and Susie explore how traditional art training often distances people from their emotional truth, and how intuitive, process-based creation allows us to reclaim that connection. Susie shares her personal story of navigating her son's complex health journey and how it led her to this work. Her grief became her teacher, showing her that creativity could be a compass in the darkest moments. They also discuss the collective grief many are feeling today—about the state of the world, climate change, political division—and how creative practice offers both refuge and revelation.
Listeners are invited to download Susie’s free resource, “Creativity and Grief Invitations Workbook,” at https://www.susiestonefield.com/podcast-gift1
Whether you're navigating personal loss, existential unease, or simply seeking a way to reconnect with your inner voice, this episode offers both encouragement and practical tools to help you walk with grief—one intuitive mark at a time.
For more information on CJ and his coaching and retreats, visit www.spiritualartisttoday.com.
Have you ever been asked, “What’s your passion?”—and found yourself coming up blank? In this heartfelt episode, CJMiller explores why so many of us feel disconnected from our deepest loves, and how passion is often something we remember, not find.
Drawing from personal stories, childhood insights, and spiritual reflection, CJ shares how our Creative DNA is imprinted long before society, money, or fear pulls us off course. You’ll be guided to reconnect with what once lit you up—without explanation, without apology.
This episode includes a powerful visualization exercise to help you quiet the noise and listen for the passions you may have been ignoring. Because when you honor what you love, you step into the joy of your true expression—as a Spiritual Artist, here to create from the inside out.
For more information, visit www.spiritualartisttoday.com.
In this episode, CJ Miller shares a foundational insight for every creative: your best art doesn’t start with materials or technique—it starts with your state of being.
While many artists focus on what board to use or how to blend colors, CJ invites us to explore what he calls the space before creation—that quiet, present-centered awareness where alignment begins. As a spiritual artist, he’s learned that when he first connects with his emotions, body, and inner presence, his creative work becomes more powerful, intuitive, and alive.
CJ introduces his Alignment and Receptivity model—a simple but profound tool to monitor your creative state—and explains why your first job as an artist is to step into presence. When you’re in alignment, you can hear Creative Intelligence speak. You’re not forcing art into existence—you’re allowing it.
“Don’t focus so much on what you’re doing. Hold it lightly. But don’t lose yourself in unconsciousness.”
If you’ve ever felt blocked or disconnected in the studio, this episode offers a powerful reframe:
Align first. Then apply your technique. That’s where the real art begins.
For more information, visit www.spiritualartisttoday.com or purchases CJ's book, "The Spiritual Artist" on Amazon.
In this deeply inspiring episode of The Spiritual Artist Podcast, CJMiller sits down with Antoinette Roze, visionary CEO of WPC Speakers Global Agency and host of the SPEAKPact Podcast. With over 30 years of experience, Antoinette helps experts transform into sought-after speakers, guiding them to increase their impact, income, and influence through the art of storytelling and authentic voice.
But Antoinette’s story begins long before the stage. Diagnosed with late-stage cancer as a child and navigating the foster care system, she shares her powerful journey of survival, spirit, and self-discovery. From refusing treatments that made her feel sicker to trusting her inner knowing, Antoinette's healing path led her to explore alternative wellness, host her own Texas Natural Wellness Expo, and ultimately become a passionate advocate for non-toxic, non-invasive healing—body, mind, and spirit.
Together, CJ and Antoinette explore:
✨ The moment that awakened her awareness and led to a life of service
✨ How to map your core talk and create a speaker's story bank
✨ Why authenticity comes from subtracting, not adding
✨ The difference between speaking to perform and speaking to transform
✨ How to “listen with release” and stay genuinely curious
✨ Why your voice is your power, and must never be buried
From motivational speaker coaching to spiritual insight, Antoinette encourages listeners to step into their truth, collect the data of their life, and share their message to create microtransformations in others.
💬 “Speak from your scars, not your open wounds.”
🎧 “Connection isn’t about you—it’s about them.”
This episode is a must-listen for anyone who wants to find their voice, tell their story, and step fully into their purpose—on stage or in life.
For more information about Antoinette Roze and how to submit as a speaker, visit https://wellnessproductionsco.com/.
To learn more about CJMiller and explore his work, visit https://www.spiritualartisttoday.com/.
In this heartfelt episode, CJMiller shares a personal story about teaching his son to drive—and the spiritual metaphor that unfolded along the way.
While navigating Central Expressway, a car sped by, weaving in and out of traffic. Instead of reacting, CJ pulled aside and let it pass. It became the perfect teaching moment: when someone operates from chaotic or aggressive energy, you don’t have to match it. Let them meet their own energy.
This story expands into a larger reflection on life. As CJ explains to his son, everything operates on a spiritual level. The consciousness of a reckless driver will eventually attract a similar consciousness. Our job is to hold steady—to stay centered in love. When we react, retaliate, or try to “win,” we step away from our love base.
Drawing inspiration from Abraham-Hicks and the concept of staying in the “vortex,” CJ explores the challenge of maintaining spiritual alignment in a world that constantly pulls us toward fear, outrage, and distraction. Whether it's doomscrolling on social media, toxic conversations, or drama-driven entertainment, we’re being called to a higher practice: holding the vibration of Love.
Be the broader Love. This isn’t romantic love—it’s the universal Love that ancient cultures and spiritual traditions have named again and again. The Greeks called it Agape. In Buddhism, it's Mettā—loving-kindness. In Hinduism, Bhakti. In Catholic mysticism, Caritas. In New Thought, it is the Creative Intelligence behind all form—Love as a force that moves through everything and asks for nothing in return.
CJ shares how he's begun pulling back from negative media and limiting his exposure to people who feed off fear and anger—not out of judgment, but to protect and nurture his own vibration. He encourages you to do the same: gently guide conversations back toward light, or walk away when necessary.
We’re often taught that we have to fix the problems we see. But sometimes, the highest form of action is demonstration. Be the lighthouse. Engage in passive resistance. Send money to organizations you believe in. Set intentions, offer prayers, donate to the disadvantaged. Staying in Love Consciousness is enough. Don’t push against—go toward Agape Love.
This episode is a gentle yet powerful reminder: we don’t fix the world by sinking to its level. We change it by holding our ground in Love, and letting others rise to meet us there—when they’re ready.
Want to improve your artwork? It might be time to look beyond your brushstrokes—and into your mind. In this episode, CJ Miller explores how the thoughts you carry into the studio directly affect your creative process, your confidence, and even the final piece.
Drawing inspiration from The Spiritual Artist, Eckhart Tolle, and contemplative wisdom from Father Richard Rohr, CJ shares practical tools to help you monitor your thoughts, practice presence, and awaken a deeper connection to your art.
You’ll learn:
Whether you’re painting, sculpting, or simply navigating life as a creative, this episode is a gentle reminder that your mind and your art are deeply connected.
The Spiritual Artist learns to listen—before the brush ever hits the canvas.
In this episode, CJ shares a recent experience of true connection after being invited to a student’s home for an artist playdate. Surrounded by different materials and supplies, they created art, exchanged ideas, and rediscovered the joy of in-person community.
But why is this kind of gathering so rare today? CJ explores how social media, the “junk food of social life,” gives the illusion of connection but leaves us feeling empty—much like a fast-food meal that satisfies in the moment but lacks real nourishment. From doom-scrolling to quick-click interactions, we’ve replaced deep relationships with fleeting digital moments.
Where are the bookstores, cafés, and gathering spots where we once met new people? Instead of engaging in real-world community, we isolate behind screens. But there’s hope.
CJ announces his new Creative Spirit Community program, launching this August at Unity Church of Dallas. Meeting on the second and fourth Wednesdays of each month, this gathering will include a talk, meditation, and small-group discussions to foster genuine connection.
Want to start building community today? CJ is offering five free copies of his book to anyone who hosts a book club at home. Or, if nothing else, just pick up the phone and make lunch plans with one friend. Real relationships start with small steps.
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What calls you?
We spend so much of our time wrapped up in what we should do—clean the house, pay the bills, check off the endless to-do list. But what if we set aside the “shoulds” for a moment and listened to what truly calls us? What if Spirit speaks, not through obligation, but through excitement?
In this episode, I explore the powerful concept of the Daimon, as introduced in James Hillman’s The Soul’s Code. This inner guide—your unique blueprint—has been with you since birth, nudging you toward your true destiny. I share a personal moment of realization, where a simple painting reminded me of my own creative calling.
What brings you joy? What sparks that deep inner yes? In my book, The Spiritual Artist (available on Amazon), I call this your Intelligence of Being—the unique code within you that guides your creative and spiritual journey. Today, I challenge you to listen to that voice—the one that knows your path better than your to-do list ever could.
When you hear the calling, what will you do?
While tending to the garden, The Spiritual Artist Podcast host CJ Miller reflects on the deeper spiritual truths revealed through nature. Inspired by the resilience of a simple dandelion, CJ explores how Creative Intelligence expresses itself through diversity, adaptability, and the unstoppable force of life.
In response to those who seek to limit the freedoms of others, CJ shifts focus to the spiritual reality—one where God, in infinite wisdom, operates through love. Just as nature finds a way to thrive despite obstacles, so too do truth, freedom, and diversity.
Through the lens of the natural world, CJ shares how shifting perspective can reveal deeper meaning. Even what is labeled as a nuisance—like dandelions—has a role to play in the grand design, benefiting pollinators and enriching the ecosystem. In the same way, every expression of life holds value.
The power of Spirit cannot be stopped. While temporary forces may appear to dominate, nature always finds a way. Spirit always prevails. Diversity is not just supported by God—it is God’s very demonstration.
In this podcast, CJMiller interviews Orlando O’Shea, an Internal Family Systems (IFS) practitioner, Jungian life coach, MSW student, writer, and abstract artist. With a deep understanding of psychology and self-exploration, Orlando specializes in working with LGBTQIA+ individuals and neurodivergent populations, helping people live more authentically by recognizing the hidden parts of themselves—especially the parts that show up in the form of emotional triggers.
At a time when the world feels increasingly divided, Orlando explains how the aspects of ourselves we reject—our shadow—often show up in others, triggering strong emotional reactions. We see this daily in the news, in political debates, and even in our personal relationships. Jungian psychology teaches that what we most resist in others is often a reflection of something unresolved within ourselves. Internal Family Systems expands on this by viewing the self as a system of different internal parts, each with its own needs, fears, and beliefs. Some of these parts are protective, while others are frozen in time, carrying the weight of past trauma. When someone or something in the world activates these hidden aspects, we react—often with anger, judgment, or fear.
Orlando shares how shadow work helps individuals reclaim these disowned parts, bringing them into conscious awareness instead of projecting them onto others. He notes that jealousy, irritation, or a strong dislike for someone can be powerful entry points for self-inquiry. Rather than asking, “Why are they like that?” we can ask, “When am I like that?”—a shift that fosters self-awareness and emotional resilience.
The conversation also delves into somatic awareness, the practice of noticing where emotions and past experiences reside in the body. Orlando explains that trauma and protective mechanisms don’t just exist in the mind—they are stored physically. Through Internal Family Systems, people learn to recognize these reactive parts, acknowledge their fears, and remind them, “I’ve got this.” Rather than labeling our reactions as flaws, this approach views them as natural survival mechanisms that can be integrated into a healthier sense of self.
In a time of heightened division and polarization, this conversation offers an invaluable perspective on how self-awareness can transform the way we relate to others. By understanding our own internal dynamics, we not only heal ourselves but also create more room for empathy, connection, and deeper conversations in the world around us.
For those interested in diving deeper into Jungian psychology, Orlando recommends:
📖 Why Good People Do Bad Things – James Hollis
📖 The Soul’s Code – James Hillman
📖 Dark Nights of the Soul – Thomas Moore
To learn more about Orlando O’Shea’s work, visit www.orlandooshea.com or follow him on Instagram at @feralsoulcoaching.
In this episode, CJ Miller shares how he processes his reactions to the world around him. When confronted with something unsettling, instead of reacting outwardly, he turns inward—observing his thoughts and shifting his consciousness. As spiritual artists, we are invited to pause, get quiet, and recognize the deeper, spiritual truth behind every situation. By practicing mindful awareness and using a rampage of gratitude, we can transform our energy, allowing the outer world to reflect this shift. Nothing is set in stone—consciousness shapes reality. Today, take a moment to watch yourself and notice the spiritual layer beneath the physical manifestation.
One Act of Defiance
In this short podcast, CJ Miller shares how he steps into love and encourages listeners to take one simple yet powerful act of defiance.
Start your morning with this practice:
"I release fear and anxiety, for I am not in the future.
I release guilt and anger, for I am not in the past.
I am here, now.
In this moment, I choose love, appreciation, and gratitude.
I trust Creative Intelligence to guide me.
I breathe. I listen. I simply am."
CJ invites you to take one act of defiance—whether it's boycotting a business, reaching out to someone with kindness, or making a conscious choice that aligns with love. While we can't control the whole world, each small act empowers us to move forward with purpose.
Katherine Revoir integrates healing modalities like Non-violent Communication, attachment theory, interpersonal neuroscience, and depth empathy to promote emotional healing and creativity. As a constellation facilitator, she helps individuals uncover how family patterns shape their behavior and emotional lives. Katherine highlights relational neuroscience, emphasizing our innate need for connection and how embodiment and somatic awareness enable artists to overcome creative blocks and access deeper artistic expression.
Katherine's own experiences during challenging life events, including business struggles and her mother's passing, guided her toward teaching from deep intuition. She stresses the importance of trusting one's inner voice, viewing intuition as a guide toward personal growth and creative authenticity. Inspired by Bert Hellinger's constellation work, her approach fosters emotional resilience and deeper self-understanding, emphasizing our interconnectedness with others.
Social neuroscience, according to Katherine, underscores that humans are wired to connect with other brains, emphasizing the importance of relationships in our psychological and emotional health. She explains that all our behaviors, including people-pleasing patterns, originate from early interactions, particularly the mother-child bond. Katherine introduces the concept of "alarmed aloneness," highlighting the importance of compassionately reconnecting with younger, unresolved parts of ourselves. She describes how companioning these memories helps relocate emotional trauma from the amygdala, where they remain stuck, to the hippocampus, allowing them to be safely processed and filed away. Katherine stresses that emotions are life-giving and should be felt rather than blocked. For more information, visit Katherine’s website richerliving.org, where you can schedule personal counseling sessions or participate in her Happy Brain Groups—8-week programs held via Zoom—and Constellation Groups.
What if the key to unlocking your creativity was as simple as screaming it out? Dr. Jayne Gardner returns to share groundbreaking insights from her new book, Best Job Ever, and her powerful Rewire Retreat. We dive into the science behind emotional release, primal wounds, and the impact of unprocessed childhood experiences on our creative and professional lives.
In this episode, we explore Primal Scream Therapy—a tool that activates the amygdala, helps dissipate negative emotions, and creates space for clarity and creativity. Dr. Jayne shares a fascinating story about coaching a group of truckers who embraced the practice and found immediate stress relief. Plus, we discuss the Emotional Set Point (ESP) and how understanding your baseline emotions can help you shift toward a more empowered and creative state.
🎙️ Tune in for a bold, refreshing conversation on deactivating negative emotions, embracing vulnerability, and discovering new pathways to personal and artistic freedom. And yes—screaming is encouraged!
For more information on Dr. Jayne Gardner, visit drjaynegardner.com or purchase her book Best Job Ever on Amazon.
To learn more about CJ Miller and The Spiritual Artist, visit spiritualartisttoday.com. His book, "The Spiritual Artist" is available on Amazon.
n this episode, Sara shares the journey that led her to become the producer of The Mindful Movement. She opens up about her thirties, a period of deep questioning, where she began to listen to her inner voice through meditation and hypnosis. As a natural teacher, Sara believes meditation is a tool to connect with our higher selves and uncover inner wisdom.
We explore themes from her new book, You Are Not Broken, which empowers readers to release self-doubt, reframe limiting beliefs, and embrace their wholeness. Sara discusses how limiting beliefs can hold us back from our full potential and why the world of personal development shouldn't be prescriptive. Her philosophy? "If it works for you, it’s good."
Through her story of self-discovery, Sara reminds us that we are whole, we are enough, and we don’t need to be fixed. Whether you’re an experienced meditator or just starting your journey, Sara’s insights will inspire you to find your unique path to transformation.
Sara Raymond, co-founder of The Mindful Movement, is a hypnotherapist and trauma-informed transformational coach with over 20 years of experience in Pilates, yoga, and meditation. With a global community of over 900,000 YouTube subscribers, Sara has become a trusted voice in mindfulness and personal growth, offering free meditation and self-hypnosis practices. Known for her compassionate and authentic approach, she creates safe spaces for growth and transformation.
For more information on Sara's meditations, visit The Mindful Movement on YouTube or her website, "https://Themindfulmovement.com.
My book, "The Spiritual Artist" is available on Amazon. For more information on my Spiritual Artist Retreats visit my website, https://www.spiritualartistoday.com.
In this episode, CJ sits down with Esther-Sophia Holland, a Stockholm-based jazz dancer, mindset coach, and aspiring teacher with a passion for helping artists break free from perfectionism, comparison, and limiting beliefs. Esther-Sophia shares her transformative journey from studying to become a high school teacher to rediscovering her love for dance and embracing the healing, grounding power of movement.
She reflects on how the world often sends discouraging messages when we dare to dream and explains how coaching gave her the tools to build confidence and a mindset that shines. Through her signature program, "Shine," Esther-Sophia helps her clients—whether painters, singers, or dancers—learn to trust their instincts, silence their inner critic, and reconnect with their creative flow.
Highlights of the conversation include:
✨ The importance of stepping out of your head and into your body to unlock new creative ideas.
🎭 How jazz dance, with its rich history and formats (including Fosse and commercial jazz), taught Esther-Sophia the art of self-expression.
🌟 Why confidence isn't about being bold all the time—it’s about knowing who you are and aligning with your values.
🎨 CJ and Esther-Sophia discuss how curiosity and playfulness can transform your creative process, reminding us that even in "messiness," we can create something beautiful.
💡 Practical prompts to pause, breathe, and invite perspective shifts during moments of self-doubt.
Whether you’re an emerging artist or a seasoned creator, this conversation invites you to find courage, joy, and ease in your creative process.
For more information about Esther-Sophia, visit, https://www.esthersophiacoaching.com/
and https://www.instagram.com/esthersophiacoaching/
For more information about CJ, visit www.spiritualartisttoday.com or find him on Instagram @thespiritualartistpodcast
In this episode, we welcome Linda Ugelow, a speaking confidence coach, movement specialist, and author of Delight in the Limelight: Overcome Your Fear of Being Seen and Realize Your Dreams. Linda shares her transformative journey from being paralyzed by the fear of public speaking to becoming a coach who helps others find joy in speaking. Drawing from her extensive background in expressive therapy and decades of performing with the world music group Libana, Linda brings a fresh perspective to overcoming the fear of being seen. Through her unique blend of movement, presence, and self-awareness, she guides individuals to connect deeply with their authentic selves and transform their experience of speaking from dread to delight.
Linda explains how fears around speaking often stem from childhood beliefs and family dynamics. She shares her realization that managing fear isn’t enough—it’s about addressing its root causes. With her innovative methods, including movement exercises and practicing presence, Linda helps her clients expand their expression, claim their space, and create an energetic environment that connects with others. Whether it's through describing their physical sensations on camera or embodying different characters while reading children’s stories, Linda emphasizes the importance of play and self-expression in building confidence and comfort in speaking situations.
Together, we explore the profound impact of presence, the role of embodied connection, and the importance of self-acceptance in public speaking and creativity. Linda shares practical tips like creating a forgiveness journal, developing a friendly relationship with the lens, and embracing mistakes as part of the process. This conversation is a must-listen for anyone looking to overcome the fear of speaking and discover the joy of being seen. To learn more about Linda’s work, visit her website, lindaugelow.com, and check out her podcast, Delight in the Limelight.
#SpiritualGrowth, #PublicSpeakingTips, #OvercomeFear, #CreativeExpression, #SpeakingConfidence, #PresenceAndPower, #TheSpiritualArtist
As the year draws to a close, CJ reflects on the journey of The Spiritual Artist Podcast throughout Season 4. His goal has always been to share spiritual concepts with creative individuals—whether they are artists or thought leaders—helping them connect with their unique Creative DNA.
In this special end-of-year review, CJ revisits the top 5 most impactful episodes of all time and reveals his personal top 3 favorites. He highlights episodes featuring artists who have transcended their challenges to embody the essence of a true Spiritual Artist—shining as points of light for others.
CJ also encourages listeners to explore his YouTube channel for visual demonstrations of his creative process, where he shares spiritual lessons through art-making. Or, stay tuned to the podcast for engaging, in-depth interviews with inspiring artists and thought leaders.
His book, "The Spiritual Artist" is available on Amazon and retreat information can be found at spiritualartistoday.com
CJ recommends his all-time favorite episodes:
Season 2, E 28
Outsider Artist Charles McDowell Navigates Bipolar Disorder with Creativity
Season 4, E88
Turning Disabilities into Art Ability with Photo Realism Artist Leonard Buscemi
Season 4, E94
Are we at choice when emotions are triggered? With Rev. Lora Brandis
In this inspiring and thought-provoking episode, International Coach and Senior Trainer for the More to Life Foundation, Ann McMaster, joins CJ Miller to explore how personal sovereignty and intuitive wisdom guide us toward our Real Reality. Ann, a psychotherapist and author of Lifeshocks, shares how the interplay of mind, heart, and gut intelligence allows us to move beyond social conditioning and cultural scripts to live authentically. Together, they discuss the concept of boundaries and how these not only protect our essence but also create the freedom to navigate relationships, social media, and life’s challenges with personal empowerment and clarity.
Ann introduces practical tools like the Say-Do-Feel alignment to assess trust and authenticity in ourselves and others. By tuning into gut intuition and adopting "soft eyes," Ann explains how we can take in a broader perspective, discerning reality while filtering out fear-based narratives. Drawing from neuroscience, she highlights the Reticular Activating System, a mechanism in the brain that aligns perception with our emotional focus. Whether navigating social media or personal relationships, Ann encourages listeners to direct their attention toward what they do want to manifest, using intentional focus and mindful attention to shape their lives.
The conversation touches on the profound connection between mind, heart, and gut, offering practical exercises to ground and reconnect with one's essence. Ann guides listeners through a powerful heart-centered grounding technique that aligns the body, calms panic, and restores clarity. CJ shares his own practice of presence and the importance of filtering out fear-based content to avoid disconnection from self, including his use of affirmative prayer as a tool to focus on desired outcomes and align with Creative Intelligence.
This episode is a beautiful invitation to embrace your personal sovereignty: follow your heart, trust your gut, and honor your unique journey by establishing boundaries that maintain personal alignment and sovereignty. Through tools like mindful attention, discernment, and love-based action, listeners are empowered to remain connected to their essence while supporting others in their authenticity. Form truly follows energy—and when you align with your truth, life unfolds with greater ease and flow.
For more information on Ann McMaster visit, https://annmcmaster.com/. Her book, "Lifeshocks: Out of the Blue" is available on Amazon.
For more information about CJ Miller and his retreats visit www.spiritualartisttoday.com . His book, "The Spiritual Artist" is available on Amazon.
Prepare for a heart-centered holiday with A Spiritual Thanksgiving: Gratitude, Service, and Silence. In this inspiring episode, I share three transformative practices—gratitude, service, and silence—that help align your spirit with the infinite flow of Creative Intelligence. Discover how gratitude acts as a portal, inviting clarity and abundance into your life. Learn how simple acts of service connect you to universal love, creating a ripple effect of positivity. Finally, embrace the power of silence, where Spirit speaks and guides you toward deeper understanding. As a spiritual artist, I’ve experienced the profound shifts these practices can bring, and I’ll guide you step-by-step in integrating them into your daily routine. Whether you’re counting blessings, helping others, or finding stillness in the holiday bustle, these practices will deepen your connection to Spirit and illuminate the beauty of living in harmony with the divine flow of life. Join me as we align with Spirit this Thanksgiving and create a season of gratitude, service, and peace.
#SpiritualAwakening #GratitudePractice #InnerPeace #MindfulnessMeditation #SpiritualJourney #ConsciousLiving #PositiveEnergy #SelfAwareness #PersonalGrowth #Spirituality
In this episode, Australian artist Jason McDonald shares his journey as a Spiritual and Energetic Artist, blending his intuitive practice with years of professional creativity. Jason explores how Creative Intelligence flows through art, shaping it as a resource for personal growth and evolution. Through intentional practices like meditation and stillness, he synthesizes and anchors energy, merging aesthetics, inspiration, and spirit to guide his creative process.
Jason reflects on the role of presence and alignment in art and life, offering insights on cultivating a deeper connection with the grand intelligence that informs our every moment. From grounding in stillness to navigating the chaos of modern life, he discusses how our relationship with this universal energy can stabilize and inspire us. Together, CJ and Jason explore practices like meditation, prayer, and intentional creation, emphasizing how they can help us center ourselves and align with the rhythms of life.
Through vivid anecdotes and thoughtful discussion, Jason reveals how art, when created with care and authenticity, serves as a bridge to a higher consciousness. From the dance between the left and right brain to the dialogue between artist and viewer, he invites listeners to embrace their innate creativity as a birthright. Whether in stillness or movement, Jason encourages us to reconnect with the joy of creating and to honor the intelligence that flows through all aspects of existence.
For more information on Jason McDonald visit his website, jasonwmcdonald.com. He can also be located on Instagram under the handle: @jasonwmcdonald.
Thank you for listening to this episode of The Spiritual Artist Podcast. For more information about CJ Miller, his art, and upcoming Spiritual Art Retreats, visit his website at www.spiritualartistoday.com. You can also find his book, The Spiritual Artist, on Amazon or wherever books are sold. Don’t forget to subscribe, leave a review, and share this episode with fellow seekers. Until next time, stay inspired and keep creating from your unique Creative DNA!
In this episode, podcast host CJMiller invites intuitive artists Joe Kresoja and Tonya Henderson to explore how they connect with their inner guidance and higher selves through their creative practices. Joe, a Los Angeles artist, shares how he creates spiritual color codes for clients by tapping into their unique energy, translating it into shapes and colors. Recently, he completed a personal energy portrait for one of his projects, which heightened his self-awareness of his own beliefs and intentions. Tonya, a Michigan-based artist, paints personal energy portraits as well, and both discuss how setting clear intentions can reveal hidden desires and inner truths, beyond surface-level goals like money and success.
Throughout the conversation, CJ delves into practical questions, asking his guests how they maintain this intuitive connection in their daily lives. Joe explains his process of meditation, sitting in stillness until an image surfaces, and then allowing colors and potential obstacles to emerge as he paints. Both Joe and Tonya stress the importance of releasing attachment to specific outcomes and instead focusing on the present moment. Tonya encourages listeners to let go of fear and external expectations, emphasizing that the path to inner freedom lies in shifting from reaction to mindful response. She shares her practice of daily meditation, where she asks for inner guidance and allows images, feelings, and answers to arise naturally.
The discussion further explores the transformative power of intentional thought and quiet reflection. Joe offers the insight that "awareness is the currency of change," suggesting that by observing our thoughts, we reclaim personal power and create space for growth. Tonya introduces forward journaling as a tool to rewrite one’s story, encouraging listeners to assess whether their beliefs serve them or cause pain. Together, CJ, Joe, and Tonya reveal that true freedom comes from within—by peeling away external influences and reconnecting with the quiet, intuitive voice that guides us toward our best selves. This episode is a heartfelt reminder of the transformative journey to self-awareness and the power of intentional creation.
For more information on Joe Kresoja and his color code paintings, visit https://www.kresoja.com/. For more information on coaching and Tonya's energy portraits visit https://tonyahenderson.com/. For more information on CJ, his coaching and retreats, visit www.spiritualartisttoday.com. His book, "The Spiritual Artist" is also available on Amazon.
In this episode of The Spiritual Artist Podcast, host C.J. Miller speaks with Laurie Seymour, founder of The Baca Institute and host of Wisdom Talk Radio. Laurie shares her insights on raising personal frequency and connecting to the quantum field to harness the power of inner guidance. A master trainer and executive mentor, Laurie introduces listeners to Turaya Touch© and Turaya Meditation©, unique energetic technologies designed to help individuals align with Source and elevate their creative potential. Together, they discuss the concept of “quantum connection” and how it can empower people to master their lives by consciously managing their own vibration.
Reflecting on the post-election atmosphere, Laurie and C.J. delve into navigating challenging moments by asking, "How do I want to respond to this?" Laurie encourages listeners to shift from reaction to intention, finding grounding in their connection to a greater energy field. Through silence, or what C.J. describes as the “hallway” – that liminal space before a clear answer emerges – Laurie suggests tuning into the heart’s wisdom, which provides a deeper level of discernment. She invites listeners to explore their own guidance by remaining present with their sensations and responses, rather than being swept away by external events.
Laurie shares her process for accessing inner wisdom and creative intelligence, guiding listeners to shift their frequency to invite more light and clarity. By focusing on the "feeling body" – an awareness that senses the energy in a statement or question – she teaches awareness as a tool for intuition and guidance. Laurie introduces her Quantum Connection Process, which empowers individuals to align their business and life with their unique creative blueprint, fostering success and well-being. Together, Laurie and C.J. explore how stepping into love and heart-centered wisdom can transform life into a continuous flow of creation, guided by spirit.
For more information on Laurie, visit https://thebacainstitute or listen to her podcast interview with CJ on Wisdom Talk Radio. CJ's book, "The Spiritual Artist" can be purchased on Amazon. For retreat information with CJ, visit www.spiritualartisttoday.com.
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Are you a spiritual artist on a journey of self-discovery? In this video, Christopher J. Miller dives deep into the transformative shifts that occur as we awaken to our spiritual and creative potential. Learn about the seven key behaviors that a spiritual artist gradually quits to align more deeply with their unique creative expression and true purpose. These are not just habits—they are profound shifts in perspective that free you from the need for external validation, sales-driven success, and control, allowing you to embrace your authentic Creative DNA.
✨ Watch to discover how to:
Quit the need for external validation
Quit the Belief that Sales Equals Success
Quit the need for Controlling the Painting
Quit Narcissistic Artist Friends Who Don't Willingly Co-Create
Quit Compromising Your Authentic Creative DNA
Quit the Habit of Reliving the Past and Obsessing Over the Future
Quit the Need to Focus on an Outcome and Enjoy the Creative Journey
If this message resonates with you, don’t forget to subscribe, hit the notification bell, and share your experiences in the comments below. Let’s connect and support each other on this profound journey of creative and spiritual awakening. 🙏✨
#SpiritualArtist #CreativeAwakening #CreativeJourney #ArtisticGrowth #MindfulCreativity #SpiritualArt #AuthenticExpression
In this episode of "The Spiritual Artist Podcast", Christopher J. Miller interviews Tonya Henderson, an artist, intuitive, and inspiring art business coach dedicated to empowering women through her unique approach to art and energy work. Tonya, who originally trained in psychometry, views art-making as a journey, focusing on the joy of creating rather than the end product. Tonya’s classes and workshops are designed not only to teach the technical aspects of art but to nurture everyone's personal growth, helping them tap into their inner wisdom and Creative Intelligence.
Throughout the conversation, Tonya delves into the importance of being fully present in the creative process, emphasizing that there is no right or wrong in art. She believes that the role of a teacher is to ensure students have fun, find their own magic, and trust the flow of creativity. Tonya explains that art often has a way of "creating itself," as it channels through the artist from a higher source. She and CJ discuss how everyone can access the 'Creative Pool,' a space of infinite ideas, by opening themselves up to Divine Intelligence, which, according to Tonya, always brings forth goodness.
Tonya also discusses her intuitive art practice, where she creates Personal Energy Portraits, offering art readings that tap into the unique energy of her clients. She shares her experiences as an intuitive reader, explaining how thoughts and energy fields can influence our physical and emotional well-being. Tonya describes how she connects with Divine Intelligence to bring forward the right message for each client, often discovering deeper meanings in her artwork. Her purpose, she says, is to serve others, recognizing that we are all reflections of one another, adding to the fabric of humanity with each act of service.
In this short clip of my upcoming podcast with Intuitive Artist Tonya Henderson, I share a personal story about my own intuitive experiences and the challenges that came with them. At one point, I felt like I was receiving negative energy or scary thoughts, so I put up a wall and decided it wasn't for me to hear. Yet, I still feel deeply empathic toward the world around me and those in need. I didn't want to turn my back on them because, as Tonya so beautifully expresses, "Anything that doesn't appear as love is a request for love."
Together, we explore how tapping into Divine Intelligence—whether you call it God, Source, or Creative Power—always brings forth something good. It’s about recognizing that even when situations or people seem unsettling, the truth is that this power is guiding us toward love and healing. I share how, when someone enters my space, I always receive the right words, reminding us that love is always the answer, and there is nothing in that divine space that can hurt us. This episode offers a heartfelt look at how we can navigate the balance between empathy, intuition, and love.
In this episode, host CJ Miller welcomes Rev. Michael Gott, Senior Minister at Unity of Houston, to explore the deep connections between creativity, spirituality, and surrender. As they discuss Michael's latest album Be Revealed, CJ asks profound questions about God, faith, and letting go of the ego.
Raised in a fundamentalist, Bible-based tradition, Michael shares his journey of rediscovery, from growing up in a strict faith to rewriting his relationship with God through recovery from alcoholism. He opens up about the pivotal moments in his life, including his experiences in the New Thought tradition over the past 30 years and his evolving understanding of a "Higher Power."
Michael reflects on his creative process and how surrendering to something greater than himself has become central to his art, spiritual practice, and daily life. The conversation touches on the themes of intention, faith, and transformation, with Michael sharing insights from his personal recovery journey and his ongoing work on a memoir.
Key moments in the discussion include Michael's thoughts on the word "God" as a blanket we throw over the mystery of life, allowing people to find their own understanding of the divine. He also delves into the role of surrender in creativity and how imperfections, or "defects of character," can be used for good when we align with the creative energy that flows through us all.
The episode concludes with Michael offering his wisdom: "You are good enough. Do what you're here to do. Don’t let the critic stop you from expressing."
For more on Rev. Michael Gott and his music, visit www.unityhouston.org.
In this episode, we sit down with Kevin Carton, an inspirational speaker, teacher, and transformational life coach certified by the Brave Thinking Institute. With over a decade of experience, Kevin has empowered hundreds to break through limitations, rewire their subconscious minds, and trust themselves on a deeper level. Kevin also discusses co-hosting the popular Science & Spirituality podcast with his brother Chris, which has reached listeners in over 113 countries and garnered more than 1.3 million downloads.
In this engaging episode, Kevin Carton delves into the fascinating intersection of science and spirituality. He discusses how modern quantum physics aligns with ancient spiritual teachings, shedding light on concepts like the origins of the universe, quantum entanglement, and the interconnected nature of all things. Kevin emphasizes the role of energy in life and creation, encouraging listeners to embrace both scientific and spiritual perspectives. He highlights the importance of the mind-body connection in healing and creative practices and touches on the wisdom of the heart and its vital role in aligning thoughts with emotions for holistic well-being.
Key Concepts:
In this episode of the "Spiritual Artist" podcast, Christopher J. Miller discusses the importance of reconnecting with one's spiritual side amid the busyness of life, especially while preparing for his upcoming solo art show. He shares a lesson learned during a yin yoga session with Lisa Coyle, emphasizing the idea that spiritual growth involves understanding who we are not rather than who we are. This practice helps remove false identifications and distractions, allowing for a deeper connection to one's true essence.
Christopher encourages listeners to practice moments of awe by recalling vivid, sensory memories that connect them with the beauty and intelligence of being. These moments of awe serve as a touchstone during stressful times, providing peace and grounding. He shares personal examples of moments of awe from his childhood and everyday life, highlighting how these experiences can help quiet the mind and open oneself to divine guidance. He concludes with a spiritual declaration exercise, inviting listeners to use these practices to cultivate a deeper presence and connection with their inner selves and the world around them.
Hello, I’m CJ Miller, host of the Spiritual Artist Podcast and YouTube channel. Today, I’m revisiting asemic writing—a profound way to tap into your unique creative voice. If you’ve ever felt constrained by traditional art forms or struggled to find your authentic expression, asemic writing offers a liberating alternative. In this episode, I’ll introduce you to an exercise that combines asemic writing with music, helping you reconnect with the pure, unfiltered creativity that lies within you.
Asemic writing is more than just abstract marks on a page; it’s a way to access your creative DNA—those innate, original impulses that are often suppressed as we conform to societal norms. By engaging in this form of expression, you can bypass the conscious mind and connect directly with your intuitive self. Inspired by the teachings of Paul Baker in his book Integration of Abilities, we’ll explore how integrating movement, music, and mark-making can lead to deeper creative breakthroughs.
In my own artistic journey, I’ve discovered that true creativity isn’t about imitating others but about discovering what makes your work uniquely yours. Through this exercise, we’ll go back to the playful, uninhibited joy of childhood—when we were free to scribble, color, and create without judgment. I’ll guide you through using simple tools like crayons and a spiral-bound tablet to explore your emotions and physical responses to music, allowing your true artistic self to emerge.
Music is a powerful catalyst for creativity. In this exercise, we’ll use it to evoke emotional responses that translate into your asemic writing. Whether you’re feeling the rhythm of a fast-paced track or the calm of a soothing melody, your marks on the page will reflect your inner state. This process isn’t about creating something beautiful in the conventional sense; it’s about capturing the raw, visceral experience of being fully present in the moment.
So, grab a box of crayons, find a quiet space, and let’s begin this journey of self-discovery. By the end of this exercise, you’ll have a series of pages that are a true reflection of your inner world. These marks are more than just art—they are a testament to your creative spirit. Join me in this exploration, and let’s uncover the unique artistic expression that’s waiting to be released. Thank you for being a part of the Spiritual Artist community.
In this episode, I share a deeply personal experience where I went against my own best advice and picked up my phone first thing in the morning. Seeing an artist’s successful post on Instagram triggered feelings of inadequacy and despondency. It’s easy to compare ourselves to others and feel like we’re not enough. However, I turned to my toolbox of coping mechanisms to process these feelings. I encourage listeners to join me as I discuss the importance of identifying the spiritual truth behind our emotions. By putting down my phone, focusing on nature, and reflecting on my unique purpose, I found a way to realign myself.
I use the metaphor of an oak tree and a blue jay to illustrate how each of us has a unique role and creative DNA. Just as the oak tree and blue jay each serve a distinct purpose, so do we as artists. It's vital to appreciate our unique gifts rather than compare ourselves to others. Drawing inspiration from nature, I realized the importance of embracing our individuality and creative expression. In this episode, I guide listeners through a brief meditation to help realign with their spiritual truth and appreciate their unique contributions to the world. Join me for a Spiritual Declaration to reinforce your unique creative path.
Podcast Host CJ Miller interviews Dr. Renée Ostertag and Wilene Dunn about their new book, Getting My Happy Back: How to Think and What to Do When Body and Mind Collide.
In this episode, Dr. Renée and Wilene delve into how their book combines personal stories with pain management techniques and insights into emotional intelligence. They discuss how the nervous system and our thoughts impact our experience of pain and tension, and how understanding this can lead to better self-improvement.
The discussion includes practical advice on using Mark Brackett's Mood Meter, a tool that maps emotions to a color-coded grid, to help shift our emotional states. Dr. Renee explains that recognizing our physiological states—whether in the red, blue, yellow, or green quadrants—can aid in navigating and alleviating pain more effectively.
Wilene shares a personal story about throat pain and how Dr. Renée’s World Storytelling Process helps identify and address underlying causes. They highlight that naming and understanding our emotional experiences allows us to shift our states more fluidly, enhancing our mind-body connection.
The episode also explores how stepping out of familiar comfort zones can be challenging due to chemical dependencies in the nervous system, but underscores the personal growth achievable through emotional and physical transformation. CJ uses his TikTok experience to illustrate how storytelling can reshape perspectives.
Dr. Renée Ostertag, an award-winning health and wellness speaker, specializes in ergonomics, pain management, resilience, and nervous system regulation. For more information, visit www.greentreemind.com.
Wilene Dunn, CEO, author, and coach, supports aspiring authors through her site, WritingThatBook.com, offering valuable guidance and support for writing and publishing projects.
In this episode, CJ Miller addresses the common question about art techniques and tools. He emphasizes that true spiritual artists listen to their inner voice and follow their interests, rather than adhering to conventional methods. CJ advocates for a liberated approach to art, where any tool can be used, and there is no single "right" discipline. This episode focuses on:
Key Takeaways
Conclusion
The episode concludes with a Sacred Space Meditation to listen to before you enter your art studio. This meditation is crafted to help you feel the presence of spirit within you, encouraging a profound connection with the eternal, spiritual you.
Podcast host CJ Miller steps out and has Intuitive Artist Joe Kresoja do a Color Code reading for him.
Los Angeles artist Joe Kresoja has discovered a process of art-making and intuitive readings called Spirituals Color Code. Joe sees flashes of colors and shapes when talking with people. He sketches what he sees and creates an original painting that represents the person's core essence, which is always shifting.
Joe conducts the reading on a second Zoom call as the client views the work. He has found that many people get locked into their personal identities.
Later, after delivering the final painting to the client, he gives them a reading about the painting. Joe is often as surprised by the reading and final art as the person receiving it.
CJ shares a past conversation with a psychic who explained that everyone receives guidance differently: some visually, some verbally, and some kinesthetically.
Joe begins by asking the client a few questions. While they answer, he sketches out shapes on a piece of paper. He receives a feeling, taps into their energy, and then reviews his sketch. He uses the feeling to create a unique Color Code based on consistent themes. He is challenged by "locking down" on a shape because the shapes are consistently moving in his mind's eye.
Joe does not claim psychic powers but considers himself an intuitive. Both Joe and CJ agree that they don't believe the future is firmly set.
Joe shares that he has always been more of a feeler than a thinker. When he reads the final painting, it's a feeling process that he taps into.
CJ and Joe use similar methods of meditation and consciousness projection when working with their clients. Both have found ways to push their consciousness beyond their physical limitations and into the world.
During this interview, Joe shares an intuitive reading based on the painting he created for CJ only days before. According to Joe, CJ has learned to be fluid and a catalyst for helping others loosen their personal identities. He advises the podcast host to "leave room for the unimaginable things in his life" by "taking action without holding so much seriousness." He tells CJ to keep his wisdom message light and shares that CJ has another significant change coming in his life where he will attract or create a spiritual community.
The podcast concludes with the importance of integrative art-making. Art provides a way to express emotions, whether grief or joy. When we feel the emotion, we give permission for it to move through us and be transmuted. CJ claims that we transmute the emotion through this process.
For more information on Joe or to schedule a Spiritual Color Code reading, visit www.kresoja.com.
For more information on CJ, visit www.spiritualartisttoday.com.
n this episode, podcast host CJMiller welcomes fellow artist, teacher, and art retreat facilitator Joy Fahey. Joy runs a vibrant YouTube channel offering online art classes and organizes yearly art retreats in Malaga, Spain.
CJ and Joy delve into the artistic and emotional benefits of art retreats, sharing their insights and experiences. CJ discusses how asemic drawing and music can inspire a painting, while Joy explains her process of Zen painting as a starting point for creativity. Joy emphasizes the importance of engaging the whole body, especially the arm, in the painting process.
Both artists describe art retreats as magical places where participants share their knowledge and learn from each other. Joy recounts a traumatic experience that led her to become a more conscious artist, and how this journey has influenced her approach to teaching and creating art. They discuss the transformative impact of art on individuals dealing with trauma, and how painting offers a new perspective on their challenges.
They highlight how everyone on the retreat shares their experiences and gets to know each other intimately. Each participant's artwork is unique, reflecting their personal journey.
Both artists describe the magical aspects of painting, describing it as rewarding, cathartic, and confidence-boosting.
Artist Joy Fahey was born in Manchester, UK, and now lives near Malaga, Spain. She studied Fine Art at Manchester College of Art and has travelled to many countries and spent long periods of time in the USA, South Africa, Hong Kong, Australia, and New Zealand.
She has had many exhibitions both nationally and internationally, including the Gaudi Galleria, Madrid, and CAC, Contemporary Art Picasso Museum, Mijas Pueblo. In July 2017, she was also represented by the Galleria Rimon, Marbella.
Joy lives in the historic and cultural village of Torrox in southern Spain, where she has her studio and teaches workshops and online courses. She also holds Creative Painting and Wellness Retreats twice a year in the beautiful Little Alhambra just outside Malaga.
For more information and to watch a video about Joy's upcoming September Art & Wellness Retreat in Malaga, Spain visit: https://www.joyfaheyclasses.com/creative-painting-and-wellness-retreat-special
For more information on CJ's upcoming Spiritual Artist Retreat in Santa Fe, New Mexico, May 4-8 visit https://www.spiritualartisttoday.com/services-9
In this episode, CJ discusses the importance of monitoring our behaviors and beliefs. What can we learn about ourselves?
CJ shares his story of martyrdom. He noticed that he had surrounded himself with a world of need. He looked beneath the apparent belief of "I choose to help others" to understand how his behavior serves him. He urges the listener to look behind their belief system and ask themselves: what does this behavior give me? How does it serve me? He realizes the behavior might be based on insecurity and unworthiness.
CJ created a full-time job caring for others but realizes he is always at choice. He doesn't need to do anything to validate himself or justify his worth. Does he want to keep being a martyr? You don't need to validate yourself.
Change is a slow, gradual process. He decides to make one small change in his life: he will sell his indoor fish tank.
He removed his indoor fish tank to move his life in the right direction.
Do I still need to be the world's caregiver? CJ urges the listener to make one change in their life.
Finally, CJ reminds the listener to trust that Creative Intelligence/God cares for everything. Trust that Creative Intelligence is working for you and directing you.
Is there a behavior that you repeat automatically? Can you let it go? Let it out of your life. For more information, visit www.spiritualartisttoday.com.
CJ's book, "The Spiritual Artist" is available on Amazon.
In this short episode, CJ discusses what he means by working on the spiritual level to resolve an issue. He shares a recent experience at a doctor's office and the increasing use of autoimmune disorders to explain cause and effect.
We learn about cause and effect at an early age; behind every effect is an originating cause, but we often forget this when trying to solve our own issues. CJ asks us to examine the reason behind any life situation.
With any issue in your life, always be willing to examine it from the causal or spiritual level. While it's sometimes challenging to see one cause, we can simply set the intent for it to be revealed and listen.
CJ shares some thoughts on creating in the state of love. If we create with money in mind, we limit ourselves to the physical plane and work from a place of lack. We create with spirit most successfully when we keep our eyes and hearts in a place of love and make decisions from that place.
Enjoy this 5-minute message and share it with your friends. For more information, visit www.spiritualartisttoday.com.
Podcast Host CJMiller sits down with Lisa Tahir, LCSW, to discuss her book, "The Chiron Effect: Healing Our Core Wounds through Astrology, Empathy, and Self-Forgiveness."
According to Lisa, The purpose of The Psychoastrology® of Chiron is two-fold: The first purpose is to reveal the unconscious patterns sourced in the reader's core wounding. The second purpose is to learn how to heal those places through empathy and self-forgiveness.
Chiron is a heavenly body with an odd elliptical orbit, first discovered in the 1970s. Although it was first called an asteroid and classified only as a minor planet with the designation "2060 Chiron" in 1989, it exhibited behavior typical of a comet. Today, it is classified as a minor planet and a comet named after a Greek Centaur known for the healing arts.
Lisa combines the study of astrology with psychotherapy to review patterns in our lives that return repeatedly in different variations. According to Lisa, her process helps people heal those wounds. She explains that our thought patterns dictate our belief systems and actions.
"We are like a mini solar system," she said. "We orbit things, and they orbit us, and we can shift those orbits to bring more joy in our lives."
CJ asks Lisa to explain the three primary attachment styles: secure, anxious, and avoidant.
These attachment styles are formed in our youth and are often carried throughout our lives. They are based on how we felt love when we didn't and the meaning we assigned to it. The early template of our relationships imprints on us and becomes a model for the future.
Truly healing invokes forgiveness and compassion. Lisa shares a process of visualizing a younger self and walking them through forgiveness. Her book is an invitation to make small shifts in your behavior, thoughts, and belief systems.
According to Lisa, we tend to have the same attachment style with prosperity and abundance as we do with our inner personal relationships. 23:16
For more information, visit https://www.nolatherapy.com/chiron/. Scroll down the page and click on the blue button to find out what sign your Chiron is in. Be prepared to enter your date of birth, place, and time.
To learn more about CJ and his Spiritual Art Retreats, visit www.spiritualartisttoday.com.
I truly appreciate all of the Spiritual Artists who have followed me during my June Doodle Book Club. Here's a bonus reading of a very relevant and informative chapter from Pema Chodrin's book titled, "The In-Between State."
It reminds me of the chapter from my book called, "The Rule of Medium," but speaks to our human situation. Enjoy.
Take the Doodle Book 30- Day Challenge This June
Podcast Host CJ Miller is taking a break from recording interviews through June but will be uploading his 30-day Doodle Book Challenge the entire month.
Commit 20 minutes each day to your Spiritual Art Practice. Starting on June 1st, 2024, CJ will begin reading excerpts from his book while the listener doodles and lets their subconscious mind process the ideas. He recommends purchasing a sketchbook or ream of white unlined paper and a box of 24 or more Crayola crayons for this exercise. Expand your creative expression by working on the spiritual (conscious) level! The book can be purchased on Amazon.com.
If you have any questions, feel free to email him at [email protected]
Take the Doodle Book 30- Day Challenge This June
Podcast Host CJ Miller is taking a break from recording interviews through June but will be uploading his 30-day Doodle Book Challenge the entire month.
Commit 20 minutes each day to your Spiritual Art Practice. Starting on June 1st, 2024, CJ will begin reading excerpts from his book while the listener doodles and lets their subconscious mind process the ideas. He recommends purchasing a sketchbook or ream of white unlined paper and a box of 24 or more Crayola crayons for this exercise. Expand your creative expression by working on the spiritual (conscious) level! The book can be purchased on Amazon.com.
If you have any questions, feel free to email him at [email protected]
Take the Doodle Book 30- Day Challenge This June
Podcast Host CJ Miller is taking a break from recording interviews through June but will be uploading his 30-day Doodle Book Challenge the entire month.
Commit 20 minutes each day to your Spiritual Art Practice. Starting on June 1st, 2024, CJ will begin reading excerpts from his book while the listener doodles and lets their subconscious mind process the ideas. He recommends purchasing a sketchbook or ream of white unlined paper and a box of 24 or more Crayola crayons for this exercise. Expand your creative expression by working on the spiritual (conscious) level! The book can be purchased on Amazon.com.
If you have any questions, feel free to email him at [email protected]
Take the Doodle Book 30- Day Challenge This June
Podcast Host CJ Miller is taking a break from recording interviews through June but will be uploading his 30-day Doodle Book Challenge the entire month.
Commit 20 minutes each day to your Spiritual Art Practice. Starting on June 1st, 2024, CJ will begin reading excerpts from his book while the listener doodles and lets their subconscious mind process the ideas. He recommends purchasing a sketchbook or ream of white unlined paper and a box of 24 or more Crayola crayons for this exercise. Expand your creative expression by working on the spiritual (conscious) level!
If you have any questions, feel free to email him at [email protected]
Take the Doodle Book 30- Day Challenge This June
Podcast Host CJ Miller is taking a break from recording interviews through June but will be uploading his 30-day Doodle Book Challenge the entire month.
Commit 20 minutes each day to your Spiritual Art Practice. Starting on June 1st, 2024, CJ will begin reading excerpts from his book while the listener doodles and lets their subconscious mind process the ideas. He recommends purchasing a sketchbook or ream of white unlined paper and a box of 24 or more Crayola crayons for this exercise. Expand your creative expression by working on the spiritual (conscious) level!
If you have any questions, feel free to email him at [email protected]
Take the Doodle Book 30- Day Challenge This June
Podcast Host CJ Miller is taking a break from recording interviews through June but will be uploading his 30-day Doodle Book Challenge the entire month.
Commit 20 minutes each day to your Spiritual Art Practice. Starting on June 1st, 2024, CJ will begin reading excerpts from his book while the listener doodles and lets their subconscious mind process the ideas. He recommends purchasing a sketchbook or ream of white unlined paper and a box of 24 or more Crayola crayons for this exercise. Expand your creative expression by working on the spiritual (conscious) level!
If you have any questions, feel free to email him at [email protected]
Take the Doodle Book 30- Day Challenge This June
Podcast Host CJ Miller is taking a break from recording interviews through June but will be uploading his 30-day Doodle Book Challenge the entire month.
Commit 20 minutes each day to your Spiritual Art Practice. Starting on June 1st, 2024, CJ will begin reading excerpts from his book while the listener doodles and lets their subconscious mind process the ideas. He recommends purchasing a sketchbook or ream of white unlined paper and a box of 24 or more Crayola crayons for this exercise. Expand your creative expression by working on the spiritual (conscious) level!
If you have any questions, feel free to email him at [email protected]
Take the Doodle Book 30- Day Challenge This June
Podcast Host CJ Miller is taking a break from recording interviews through June but will be uploading his 30-day Doodle Book Challenge the entire month.
Commit 20 minutes each day to your Spiritual Art Practice. Starting on June 1st, 2024, CJ will begin reading excerpts from his book while the listener doodles and lets their subconscious mind process the ideas. He recommends purchasing a sketchbook or ream of white unlined paper and a box of 24 or more Crayola crayons for this exercise. Expand your creative expression by working on the spiritual (conscious) level!
If you have any questions, feel free to email him at [email protected]
Take the Doodle Book 30- Day Challenge This June
Podcast Host CJ Miller is taking a break from recording interviews through June but will be uploading his 30-day Doodle Book Challenge the entire month.
Commit 20 minutes each day to your Spiritual Art Practice. Starting on June 1st, 2024, CJ will begin reading excerpts from his book while the listener doodles and lets their subconscious mind process the ideas. He recommends purchasing a sketchbook or ream of white unlined paper and a box of 24 or more Crayola crayons for this exercise. Expand your creative expression by working on the spiritual (conscious) level!
If you have any questions, feel free to email him at [email protected]
Take the Doodle Book 30- Day Challenge This June
Podcast Host CJ Miller is taking a break from recording interviews through June but will be uploading his 30-day Doodle Book Challenge the entire month.
Commit 20 minutes each day to your Spiritual Art Practice. Starting on June 1st, 2024, CJ will begin reading excerpts from his book while the listener doodles and lets their subconscious mind process the ideas. He recommends purchasing a sketchbook or ream of white unlined paper and a box of 24 or more Crayola crayons for this exercise. Expand your creative expression by working on the spiritual (conscious) level!
If you have any questions, feel free to email him at [email protected]
Take the Doodle Book 30- Day Challenge This June
Podcast Host CJ Miller is taking a break from recording interviews through June but will be uploading his 30-day Doodle Book Challenge the entire month.
Commit 20 minutes each day to your Spiritual Art Practice. Starting on June 1st, 2024, CJ will begin reading excerpts from his book while the listener doodles and lets their subconscious mind process the ideas. He recommends purchasing a sketchbook or ream of white unlined paper and a box of 24 or more Crayola crayons for this exercise. Expand your creative expression by working on the spiritual (conscious) level!
If you have any questions, feel free to email him at [email protected]
Take the Doodle Book 30- Day Challenge This June
Podcast Host CJ Miller is taking a break from recording interviews through June but will be uploading his 30-day Doodle Book Challenge the entire month.
Commit 20 minutes each day to your Spiritual Art Practice. Starting on June 1st, 2024, CJ will begin reading excerpts from his book while the listener doodles and lets their subconscious mind process the ideas. He recommends purchasing a sketchbook or ream of white unlined paper and a box of 24 or more Crayola crayons for this exercise. Expand your creative expression by working on the spiritual (conscious) level!
If you have any questions, feel free to email him at [email protected]
Commit 20 minutes each day to your Spiritual Art Practice. Today, I’m reading “One Agreement” from the introduction of my book.
Starting on June 1, 2024, I will begin reading excerpts from my book, “The Spiritual Artist,” while you doodle and let your subconscious mind process the ideas. You do not have to be an experienced artist to participate in this challenge!
I recommend purchasing a sketchbook or ream of white unlined paper and a box of 24 or more Crayola crayons for this exercise. By working on the spiritual (conscious) level, you can expand your creative expression!
I’m taking a break from recording new podcast interviews through June, but I will be uploading my 30-day Doodle Book Challenge each day. If you have any questions, feel free to email me at [email protected] or visit https://spiritualartisttoday.com
Take the Doodle Book 30- Day Challenge This June
Podcast Host CJ Miller is taking a break from recording interviews through June but will be uploading his 30-day Doodle Book Challenge the entire month.
Commit 20 minutes each day to your Spiritual Art Practice. Starting on June 1st, 2024, CJ will begin reading excerpts from his book while the listener doodles and lets their subconscious mind process the ideas. He recommends purchasing a sketchbook or ream of white unlined paper and a box of 24 or more Crayola crayons for this exercise. Expand your creative expression by working on the spiritual (conscious) level!
If you have any questions, feel free to email him at [email protected]
Take the Doodle Book 30- Day Challenge This June
Podcast Host CJ Miller is taking a break from recording interviews through June but will be uploading his 30-day Doodle Book Challenge the entire month.
Commit 20 minutes each day to your Spiritual Art Practice. Starting on June 1st, 2024, CJ will begin reading excerpts from his book while the listener doodles and lets their subconscious mind process the ideas. He recommends purchasing a sketchbook or ream of white unlined paper and a box of 24 or more Crayola crayons for this exercise. Expand your creative expression by working on the spiritual (conscious) level!
If you have any questions, feel free to email him at [email protected]
Take the Doodle Book 30- Day Challenge This June
Podcast Host CJ Miller is taking a break from recording interviews through June but will be uploading his 30-day Doodle Book Challenge the entire month.
Commit 20 minutes each day to your Spiritual Art Practice. Starting on June 1st, 2024, CJ will begin reading excerpts from his book while the listener doodles and lets their subconscious mind process the ideas. He recommends purchasing a sketchbook or ream of white unlined paper and a box of 24 or more Crayola crayons for this exercise. Expand your creative expression by working on the spiritual (conscious) level!
If you have any questions, feel free to email him at [email protected]
Take the Doodle Book 30- Day Challenge This June
Podcast Host CJ Miller is taking a break from recording interviews through June but will be uploading his 30-day Doodle Book Challenge the entire month.
Commit 20 minutes each day to your Spiritual Art Practice. Starting on June 1st, 2024, CJ will begin reading excerpts from his book while the listener doodles and lets their subconscious mind process the ideas. He recommends purchasing a sketchbook or ream of white unlined paper and a box of 24 or more Crayola crayons for this exercise. Expand your creative expression by working on the spiritual (conscious) level!
If you have any questions, feel free to email him at [email protected]
Chapter 7: Recognizing Spirit.
Podcast Host CJ Miller is taking a break from recording interviews through June but will be uploading his 30-day Doodle Book Challenge the entire month.
Commit 20 minutes each day to your Spiritual Art Practice. Starting on June 1st, 2024, CJ will begin reading excerpts from his book while the listener doodles and lets their subconscious mind process the ideas. He recommends purchasing a sketchbook or ream of white unlined paper and a box of 24 or more Crayola crayons for this exercise. Expand your creative expression by working on the spiritual (conscious) level!
If you have any questions, feel free to email him at [email protected]
Take the Doodle Book 30- Day Challenge This June
Podcast Host CJ Miller is taking a break from recording interviews through June but will be uploading his 30-day Doodle Book Challenge the entire month.
Commit 20 minutes each day to your Spiritual Art Practice. Starting on June 1st, 2024, CJ will begin reading excerpts from his book while the listener doodles and lets their subconscious mind process the ideas. He recommends purchasing a sketchbook or ream of white unlined paper and a box of 24 or more Crayola crayons for this exercise. Expand your creative expression by working on the spiritual (conscious) level!
If you have any questions, feel free to email him at [email protected]
Podcast Host CJ Miller is taking a break from recording interviews through June but will be uploading his 30-day Doodle Book Challenge the entire month.
Commit 20 minutes each day to your Spiritual Art Practice. Starting on June 1st, 2024, CJ will begin reading excerpts from his book while the listener doodles and lets their subconscious mind process the ideas. He recommends purchasing a sketchbook or ream of white unlined paper and a box of 24 or more Crayola crayons for this exercise. Expand your creative expression by working on the spiritual (conscious) level!
If you have any questions, feel free to email him at [email protected]
Take the Doodle Book 30- Day Challenge This June
Podcast Host CJ Miller is taking a break from recording interviews through June but will be uploading his 30-day Doodle Book Challenge the entire month.
Commit 20 minutes each day to your Spiritual Art Practice. Starting on June 1st, 2024, CJ will begin reading excerpts from his book while the listener doodles and lets their subconscious mind process the ideas. He recommends purchasing a sketchbook or ream of white unlined paper and a box of 24 or more Crayola crayons for this exercise. Expand your creative expression by working on the spiritual (conscious) level!
If you have any questions, feel free to email him at [email protected]
Take the Doodle Book 30- Day Challenge This June
Podcast Host CJ Miller is taking a break from recording interviews through June but will be uploading his 30-day Doodle Book Challenge the entire month.
Commit 20 minutes each day to your Spiritual Art Practice. Starting on June 1st, 2024, CJ will begin reading excerpts from his book while the listener doodles and lets their subconscious mind process the ideas. He recommends purchasing a sketchbook or ream of white unlined paper and a box of 24 or more Crayola crayons for this exercise. Expand your creative expression by working on the spiritual (conscious) level!
If you have any questions, feel free to email him at [email protected]
Take the Doodle Book 30- Day Challenge This June
Podcast Host CJ Miller is taking a break from recording interviews through June but will be uploading his 30-day Doodle Book Challenge the entire month.
Commit 20 minutes each day to your Spiritual Art Practice. Starting on June 1st, 2024, CJ will begin reading excerpts from his book while the listener doodles and lets their subconscious mind process the ideas. He recommends purchasing a sketchbook or ream of white unlined paper and a box of 24 or more Crayola crayons for this exercise. Expand your creative expression by working on the spiritual (conscious) level!
If you have any questions, feel free to email him at [email protected]
Take the Doodle Book 30- Day Challenge This June
Podcast Host CJ Miller is taking a break from recording interviews through June but will be uploading his 30-day Doodle Book Challenge the entire month.
Commit 20 minutes each day to your Spiritual Art Practice. Starting on June 1st, 2024, CJ will begin reading excerpts from his book while the listener doodles and lets their subconscious mind process the ideas. He recommends purchasing a sketchbook or ream of white unlined paper and a box of 24 or more Crayola crayons for this exercise. Expand your creative expression by working on the spiritual (conscious) level!
If you have any questions, feel free to email him at [email protected]
Take the Doodle Book 30- Day Challenge This June
Podcast Host CJ Miller is taking a break from recording interviews through June but will be uploading his 30-day Doodle Book Challenge the entire month.
Commit 20 minutes each day to your Spiritual Art Practice. Starting on June 1st, 2024, CJ will begin reading excerpts from his book while the listener doodles and lets their subconscious mind process the ideas. He recommends purchasing a sketchbook or ream of white unlined paper and a box of 24 or more Crayola crayons for this exercise. Expand your creative expression by working on the spiritual (conscious) level!
If you have any questions, feel free to email him at [email protected]
Take the Doodle Book 30- Day Challenge This June
Podcast Host CJ Miller is taking a break from recording interviews through June but will be uploading his 30-day Doodle Book Challenge the entire month.
Commit 20 minutes each day to your Spiritual Art Practice. Starting on June 1st, 2024, CJ will begin reading excerpts from his book while the listener doodles and lets their subconscious mind process the ideas. He recommends purchasing a sketchbook or ream of white unlined paper and a box of 24 or more Crayola crayons for this exercise. Expand your creative expression by working on the spiritual (conscious) level!
If you have any questions, feel free to email him at [email protected]
Commit 20 minutes each day to your Spiritual Art Practice. Today, I’m reading “One Agreement” from the introduction of my book.
Starting on June 1, 2024, I will begin reading excerpts from my book, “The Spiritual Artist,” while you doodle and let your subconscious mind process the ideas. You do not have to be an experienced artist to participate in this challenge!
I recommend purchasing a sketchbook or ream of white unlined paper and a box of 24 or more Crayola crayons for this exercise. By working on the spiritual (conscious) level, you can expand your creative expression!
I’m taking a break from recording new podcast interviews through June, but I will be uploading my 30-day Doodle Book Challenge each day. If you have any questions, feel free to email me at [email protected] or visit https://spiritualartisttoday.com
Podcast Host CJMiller sits down with mixed-media artist and empath Kimberly Morrow. The teacher and multi-media artist shares her story and explains that being an empath isn't always easy. Only through life experience has she learned to navigate her ability to sense the emotions, feelings, and energy of those around her.
Sometimes, an empath takes on a person's feelings nearby, and she has to move away from them and disconnect herself from the situation. She shares the concept of energy vampires and how she distances herself from these sorts of people. As a child, she would hide from others and avoid group environments.
Kim believes all living creatures have an energy field extending beyond their body. As an artist, she often monitors the proximity of those around her when she paints. If they have negative energy, she finds herself moving away from them. Kim has learned to step back from her emotions and reexamine them from a distance.
CJ and Kim share the challenges of doing all-day art shows and how they can deplete empaths of their energy. When we are empaths or highly sensitive people, we must nurture ourselves. How do you take care of an empath? Kim and CJ feel that a hot bath is one of the best remedies to calm your energy down. Kim believes there is a difference depending on the salinity of the water; submersion in a lake, river, and ocean is slightly different.
As Kim has aged, she's learned to appreciate and value her enhanced abilities, but most importantly, to trust them. Her highly sensitive skills are a tool for navigating life.
Follow Kim on Instagram @kimberlymorrow.art.design. For more information on CJ, visit www.spiritualartisttoday.com
Podcast Host CJ Miller is taking a break from recording interviews through June but will be uploading his 30-day Doodle Book Challenge the entire month.
Commit 20 minutes each day to your Spiritual Art Practice. Starting on June 1st, 2024, CJ will begin reading excerpts from his book while the listener doodles and lets their subconscious mind process the ideas. He recommends purchasing a sketchbook or ream of white unlined paper and a box of 24 or more Crayola crayons for this exercise. Expand your creative expression by working on the spiritual (conscious) level!
If you have any questions, feel free to email him at [email protected]
How do we navigate grief and process it? Most significantly, how do we handle emotional triggers when they seem to reinvigorate past grief? Podcast Host CJMiller sits down with Reverand Lora Brandis, a Unitarian Universalist Minister with experience as a congregational minister, hospital chaplain, and spiritual director.
Lora shares her personal experience navigating grief after the loss of her daughter, stepdaughter, ex-husband, and college friend in the space of only two years. It's essential to talk about our grief and death. We are afraid of the sadness we see in others. When Lora tells her story, she recognizes that it does stop the conversation.
There's something about acknowledging death; it gives us space to understand that we are all dying. It's going to be sad, and people will miss us. Denial of death runs through religion and our society.
Lora continues to serve as an on-call hospital chaplain, providing spiritual support for those in hospital emergency rooms as a witness to their experience. She shares a recent experience that triggered her memory of the loss of her ex-husband, including a situation with an emergency vehicle, the ride to the hospital, and the final realization that nothing could be done to save the patient.
She introduces the term "metabolize grief." Lora lost her daughter only months before COVID-19, and she found herself isolated in grief. She shares how something would trigger her, and she would stop midstride and sob. It's essential to give your whole self time to process the loss.
Lora lists several practices to walk through her sadness, including journaling, meditation, prayer, reading, painting, and gardening. Her spiritual practice includes journaling, and she consciously decided to write down every detail from the day of her daughter's death. A way to save it but not keep it active in her mind. However, she cautions against getting stuck in your story. It's crucial to monitor ourselves if we feel caught in grief and retelling our story repeatedly.
Sometimes, we don't have as much choice as we think when our emotions are triggered; we have to surrender to them. She suggests finding your squad of several close friends to walk you through the process with good boundaries.
Lora reminds us that we are meaning-making creatures. We make meaning from our experiences. The question to ask about a trigger is, "How am I making meaning now in this moment?" We can change the meaning of triggers if we let them, and we can change how we make meaning of our lives.
The conversation references Megan Devine's "It's OK That You're Not OK" and Eckhart Tolles's "The Power of Now." She also recommended www.refugeingrief.com. For more information on Lora's spiritual coaching or to book her as a speaker, visit www.lorabrandis.com. For more information on CJMiller's book, speaking, and spiritual art retreats, visit www.spiritualartisttoday.com.
Podcast host CJMiller chats with artist and author Sharon J. Burton about affirmations and her upcoming book release, "Creative Sparks: 21 Affirmations and Inspiration for Creativity at Midlife."
Sharon believes that many people from her generation have been suppressed from being creative, and when they arrive at midlife, they often have time and money to be creative but encounter blocks. Sharon shares her story of rediscovering her art side and describes her book as a love letter to others, saying, "You can do this."
Each chapter shares her personal story and presents a starting affirmation. The reader can adopt that affirmation or create one more specific to their needs. An affirmation should be written in the present tense. She encourages artists to pivot negative beliefs into positive language that begins a new thought pattern.
The author shares how she selects a new affirmation each day based on her intentions for that day. Before she journals, she writes an affirmation seven times. This ritual puts her in the right frame of mind before beginning the creative process. She also suggests putting your affirmations where you see them in your studio throughout the day. CJ places his affirmation on his mirror to read every morning.
Each chapter deals with issues often faced by artists. CJ and Sharon discuss an issue artists deal with imposter syndrome. Sharon asks the listener to locate where the feeling came from; did someone say something, or was it a voice in your head? Then, write the opposite in an affirmative statement. Write who you truly are.
She cautions that affirmations are a good tool but not a magic pill. Sometimes, we encounter blocks that require professional help. Affirmations are just tools that are part of your arsenal for being a creative person.
The artist concludes the podcast by encouraging everyone to celebrate and embrace their creativity.
Sharon J. Burton is an artist, art curator, poet, teaching artist, yoga nidra guide, certified creativity coach, and founder of Spark Your Creative based in the Washington, DC, area.
She is also the host of Spark Your Creative Podcast, which features artists and other creatives using their unique talents to create more mindful communities and a safer world.
She is the author of Creative Sparks: 21 Affirmations and Inspiration for Creativity at Midlife, published by Swiner Publishing Company, which will be released on May 14, 2024.
More information about CJ, can be found at https//www.spiritualartisttoday.com
Podcast Host CJMiller sits down with SUNY Old Westbury Assistant Professor and Mixed Media Artist Fred Fleisher to discuss symbolism in art.
Fred talks about creating art that deals with duality issues and the perceived separateness of each other. The imaginative artist shares his process and expanding practice in maintaining presence and flow when creating his 2-dimensional paintings and sculptural installations. Fred incorporates humor, cynicism, and satire into his work by combining symbolistic elements from our everyday social fabric. In essence, the artist uses humor in art to "get through the day" and deal with society's current challenges.
His process includes surrounding himself with a studio full of iconic "parts," entering a flow state and combining different elements to express himself. He discovers an idea for something, works it out, and then allows some freewheeling while sketching the image.
Fred uses his phone and iPad to set up his rough composition. From there, he goes to his canvas, where the idea progresses and emerges. "I allow energy to unfold and see what happens when I put disparate things together," he said.
His creations include assemblage art as well as 2-dimensional surfaces. Fred sources " Spiritual Moderns: Twentieth-Century American Artists and Religion" by Erica Doss and "The Spiritual Artist" by Christopher J. Miller as inspired sources.
In conversation, Fred ponders whether symbolism can stop us from spiritually communicating something more significant, while CJ ponders the opposite. As CJ prepares for an upcoming show, he struggles with not adding symbolic elements.
CJ shares how many of us try to qualify our spiritual worth by whether our art is successful. We are not trying to validate our worth when we create art. Both agree that we shouldn't let our perceived identities stop us from connecting to Spirit.
CJ and Fred also discussed the writing process. CJ encourages writers to get their thoughts down quickly and edit later. Fred references "The War of Art" by Steven Pressfield.
According to Fred, creating art is a way to stop the mind chatter, the thoughts of duality, and practice presence. The podcast concludes with Fred sharing how communication, both verbally and through art, is the key to personal growth. For more information and samples of Fred's work, visit https://www.fredfleisher.net.
Fred Fleisher is originally from Pennsylvania and has lived in the New York metropolitan area for over twenty-five years. After enlisting in the Army, he earned an MFA from Queens College, CUNY, a BFA in Painting & Drawing, and a BS in Art Education from Penn State University. Both nationally and internationally, Galleries have represented his work, and he has had recent solo exhibitions in Brooklyn and New York City. He has been included in several exhibitions and numerous group exhibitions while working with curators in the art world. He also organizes and curates exhibitions and is an Assistant Professor at SUNY Old Westbury.
For more information on CJ and his art retreats, visit www.spiritualartisttoday.com. His book, "The Spiritual Artist," is available on Amazon.
In this episode, host CJ Miller questions Peace and Human Rights Activist Hadi Jawad on ways each of us can promote peace in our communities. How does someone promote Human rights and Peace on an individual scale? Hadi encourages the listener to familiarize themselves with the 30 principles of the Univeral Declaration of Human Rights and begin looking at news articles through the Human Rights lens.
Podcast Host CJMiller met Hadi Jawad while serving on an Interfaith Panel with a diverse group of Christians, Muslims, and Jews and quickly became friends. According to Hadi, it is ingrained in the human spirit to love and be kind to each other.
Hadi is a Dallas peace, justice, and human rights activist. He is a follower of the principles of non-violent resistance, as exemplified by the Reverend Martin Luther King and Mahatma Gandhi, and he opposes militarism and war. He served on the board of the Dallas Peace Center as an organizer from 1997 to 2015, chairing their Middle East Peace Committee and media spokesperson. He led efforts to organize protests against the US invasion of Iraq that culminated in the largest anti-war demonstration in Dallas history on February 15, 2003.
Hadi comes from a culture steeped in oral tradition and values the importance of storytelling and shares a story from his youth playing in his neighborhood. A wandering Sufi walked by and engaged him. The Sufi was dressed in traditional clothes and holding a begging bowl. At the end of the conversation, the Sufi stabs the dirt with his stick and picks something up. He motions for Hadi to put it in his mouth. In his memory, Hadi tasted the sweetest candy that he had ever had in the whole world and recognized the mysticism of the world.
The future activist was always gravitating to finding the good and miraculous in relationships. While Hadi was passionate about mathematics, he didn't want to enter the arms industry as an engineer, and instead, he pursued managing and owning a forklift business. Only years later did he listen to his true calling and decide to be an advocate for Peace and nonviolence.
According to Hadi, Judaism is the root of a tree, the trunk and the branches are Christianity, and Islam/Sufism is the foliage. Hadi explains some principles of Sufism. Sufis believe that anything material and non-material is one being, regardless of the question: Love is the answer. He defines this as the unity of being.
How do you stay in the centeredness of Peace:
Hadi is drawn to helping the underserved. He tends to look for opportunities to help those who have fallen through the cracks, and he believes that comes from his mystical side. He's drawn to mysticism and mystical thought and believes that love is mysticism.
According to Hadi, mystics understand that many of our desires are counterfeit coins and that mystics know where to find the real gold. Hadi shares a story about a villager who demands a diamond from a mystic. The diamond is represented as a rock, and the villager returns it the next day and says, "Give me the wealth that made it so easy for you to give the largest diamond in the world away."
Hadi believes that mystics know where the wealth is. It's not in your car. It's not in your relationships. It's not in a mansion. It's in our hearts. It's in love.
Hadi is working with Rick Halpern, Director of the Human Rights Program at SMU, to make the City of Dallas a Human Rights City that supports the United Nations Universal Declaration of Human Rights. This document is uploaded to the Spiritual Artist Today website and can be found in the practice guides section.
He concludes the inter
CJ interviews Dan about his current one-person show, "Pollinator / Not Pollinator (But mostly Bees)," at the Texas Discovery Gardens at Fair Park until April 28, and about the challenges of a solo show. Dan shares how he considered many different aspects when theming his show:
He explains how producing a solo show differs significantly from submitting to a group show. It forces you to focus on your message, quality, and intent. A solo show expresses a unique aspect of you; who are you?
Environmental awareness is a strong message for Dan's show. Art has a responsibility to express the existential issues that we face today. You cannot find a place on the earth that doesn't have evidence of human beings.
Dan's show features paintings of insects and animals, all represented in a square format. Dan chose to present each creature abstractly to make an environmental statement. Additionally, he wanted to challenge himself compositionally by working within the confines of a small square. This exhibition showcases Dan's unique artistic style and his commitment to environmental awareness.
Dan uses writing and fine art separately as well as together. CJ and Dan discuss how he included poetry in his show and agree that artists don't have to "stay in our lane." We can mix different artistic disciplines.
Dan Collins, the local Dallas artist and poet, has maintained an artistic practice his entire life, participating recently in group shows such as Fresh Faces 2 x 2 at the White Rock Bath House and community art events such as the White Rock Studio Tour. He is co-owner of Tree House Studio with his wife, Rebecca, where they offer classes and workshops. His poetry has been published in various print journals and online. He is a commercial printer by profession. Now that he is closing in on retirement, he is looking forward to devoting all his time to visual and literary creative pursuits. He has contributed to and participated in the local literary scene in various capacities for over a decade.
For more information on CJ, visit www.spiritualartisttoday.com.
Instagram: cjmillerart, thespiritualartistpodcast
TikTok: spiritualartist123
YouTube: spiritualartist123
Facebook: @thespiritualartistpodcast
Podcast Host CJ Miller sits down with writer, artist, and podcaster Sally Jean Fox to discuss her new book, "Meeting the Muse After Midlife, a memoir about finding hope and meaning after 50"– mainly through creative expression.
Sally's journey includes releasing limiting beliefs, tapping into her intuition, and listening to the guidance of two muses, Isabel and Marco. She explains that aging is not all doom and gloom, nor a bed of roses, but the ideal place to take creative risks. We keep our imagination and creative power throughout our entire lives.
CJ opens the podcast by asking Sally to unpack one chapter of her book, “Finding the Girl in Madras." Sally explains how the "girl in Madras" is her own younger self and shares how two boys teased and humiliated her in fourth grade. She carried the shame of the experience for many years. As she began her muse-led journey, she released the pain caused by their comments and accepted herself.
Part of her healing included drawing faces and realizing that there are no ugly faces for an artist. Ultimately, it became a healing journey. CJ encourages listeners to find a childhood photo, re-examine it with fresh eyes, and send love to their youthful selves. Sally recommends drawing the photo, writing about it in your journal, or even singing a song about it.
Sally originally hesitated to share the concept of her muses, subtle personified presence that came into her life for guidance. Her first muse, Isabel, was gentle and maternal. Her second Muse, Marco, had a stronger, encouraging voice. While she wrestled with the question of their source, she decided it didn't matter; her muses rebuffed her inner critic and provided a counterweight. Approval is seductive, she emphasizes, but ultimately, we should enjoy the freedom to be ourselves.
Sally refers to some of Father Richard Rohr's teachings: the first half of our life is about building infrastructure, ego, and financial gain; the second half is an opportunity to embrace our spirituality.
Ultimately, she encourages the listener by issuing this challenge, "Do you help people in life? Do you forgive? Do you seek joy? Do you want to eliminate suffering in the world? Those are the things that speak to me."
The writer holds an MBA and PhD from Fielding Graduate University and lives with her horse and husband on an island near Seattle. For more information, visit her site, www.engagingpresence.com, and follow her Engaging Presence blog, or listen to her podcast, "Vital Presence."
For more information on CJ's book, podcast, or Spiritual Artist Retreats, visit www.spiritualartisttoday.com. His book, "The Spiritual Artist," can be found on Amazon.
How do we use our perceived disabilities and turn them into assets? In this episode, Host CJ Miller interviews Photo Realism Artist and Art Educator Leonard Buscemi (Lenny) on a unique gridding system that has propelled his students to win state and national awards.
Born with ADD and dyslexia, Lenny was raised in a "disability-aware" household and forced to discover fresh ways to navigate his artistic skills. He's developed a precise method of gridding to create stunning works of photorealism, leading to a life-long passion for helping those with mental handicaps and disabilities.
While waiting for his father during a sales call, Lenny found a book with an art activity where you draw as you look at a grid overlay on an original image. Later, he read about Johannes Vermeer and the use of a camera obscura. A camera obscura is a box, tent, or room with a small hole in one side or the top. Light from an external scene passes through the hole. The artist used a projector to trace the image. Lenny was experimenting with these techniques when his teacher emphasized the imp
His art mentor often said, "It doesn't matter how you get to the result with artwork. It's the result that matters. You don't walk around a museum and say, "How did they do that."
Lenny discusses how to make a grid for painting to help his students with their process. He found a way to use the system without leaving marks on the art and recommends starting with black-and-white projects before moving on to color. Lenny references the book by Betty Edwards, "Drawing from the Right Side of the Brain," as good reference material. He recommends breaking the art process down into bite-sized pieces.
CJ and Lenny discuss the importance of honoring art students by displaying their work at home and in schools to encourage creativity. He believes in positive reinforcement. Lenny says, "Inspiration is for amateurs. It's about doing the work."
Lenny paraphrases Romans 8:28, "All things work together for those who love the Lord."
According to the art educator, "We can experience bad things and say they destroyed us, or we could say that they created character in us so we can assist others."
In this podcast, CJ Miller explores and unpacks the effects of trauma and creativity with psychotherapist Dr. Don St. John.
Dr. Don has spent a lifetime exploring healing modalities after being raised by a physically and verbally abusive mother and an "almost non-existent" father. His recently revised book, "Healing the Wounds of Childhood and Culture," is available on Amazon. He has been engaging the four pillars of wholeness for almost 60 years: the Somatic, the Psycho-emotional, the Relational, and the Spiritual," and has taught and presented to the US, Canada, New Zealand, and Brazil.
CJ shares how he often asks his art students to reflect on their lives and see how their artwork was received as a child. He has found that moving past these situations can release new levels of creativity.
Dr. Don explains that his first response to the abuse was to freeze and live in a fantasy world. It wasn't until his early twenties that he recognized a need for healing. "Trauma affects your entire being, even your very tissues," said Dr. Don. "It affects our ability to relate to each other and our capacity for love." There is a creative aspect in turning those wounds into gold.
The interview includes the importance of listening to ourselves and others, addressing stored trauma in the body through the Continuum Consciousness movement, reexamining cultural belief systems, expressing gratitude, and listening to that internal voice for guidance.
Dr. Don reminds us to view trauma resolution as an "adventure of a lifetime" and recognize that you're having this moment because of everything that came before.
Dr. Don is certified as a Continuum Consciousness Teacher and believes in releasing trauma through the body. Trauma keeps us from living in the present because we are trying to protect ourselves from the wounds of the past. He assists people in fluid movement explorations to release trauma and resistance.
Continuum is an approach to exploring how we live in and move through our bodies. Continuum is a portal to a deeper awareness of, and connection to, embodiment, movement, learning, growth, well-being, and creativity. Attention to internal experience through breath, sound, meditative awareness, and fluid movement expands our experience of embodiment. Listeners can find local teachers for this modality by visiting www.continuumteachers.com.
In conclusion, Dr. Don encourages listeners to embark on their healing journey and become lifelong learners. He encourages everyone to be aware of the benefits of therapy and concludes the interview by asking, "Can you let love in? Can you increase your capacity for love?"
For more information on Dr. Don St. John, visit https://pathsofconnection.com/
Facebook: facebook.com/don.s.john.90
LinkedIn: linkedin.com/in/don-st-john-36636a55
For more information on CJ Miller, visit https://spiritualartisttoday.com
Crystal Nelson is a mixed-media artist based in the DFW area. She studied printmaking and painting at the University of Texas El Paso and recently retired from teaching art for over 25 years.
In this college artist interview, Crystal shares seven ways to make shapes. Crystal often starts her work with collages by working out the color, shape, and textures. She uses a variety of methods to create exciting shapes in her work.
Crystal recognized that she has a limited visual vocabulary after realizing she tends to repeat the same shape repeatedly and has investigated novel ways to discover new shapes.
Number 1: Look at the packaging in your recycling bin and examine it for new shapes.
Number 2: Cut plastic letter stencils in half to create fresh shapes.
Number 3: Explore negative space around letter forms on stencils.
Number 4: Before glazing, move the layer of transparent shapes around to see if they reveal a 3rd shape.
Number 5: Paint your tissue paper with watered-down Golden Fluid and gel medium, and let it dry before using your stencils to cut out new shapes.
Number 6: Use cheap Sulphite drawing paper and paint with sample house paint. Both paints are latex and work together. Extra tip: Use pre-painted Sulphite drawing paper to test placement.
Number 7: Cut your shapes of old newsprint or porous book pages. According to Crystal, creating a story, whether layered or textured, is essential. Painting is a dance of adding and subtracting. At the end of the episode, Crystal reminds the listener, "In creativity, there is getting attention and paying attention," and there's room for both.
Crystal has created art as long as she can remember, but for the last 4-5 years, she has primarily focused on making process-driven abstract art. She loves exploring intuitive abstract acrylic painting through textures, shapes, and color and finding the story within her surfaces.
She teaches mixed media and Gelli printing workshops and recently curated the Deconstructed Exhibit for the Visual Arts League of Lewisville at the Lewisville Grand Theater. Crystal's motto is "Seek Beauty, Seek Truth".
For more information, follow Crystal Nelson on Instagram @crysdnelson. For more information on CJ, follow him on Instagram @thespiritualartistpodcast or @cjmillerart
In this podcast, Chris and Jennifer Roig Francoli discuss her new book, "Make Great Music with Ease! The Secret to Smarter Practice, Confident Performance, and Living a Happier Life." The book is now available on Amazon. Jennifer Roig-Francolí is a prize-winning violinist, certified Alexander Technique teacher, and creator of The Art of Freedom® Method for conscious living and masterful artistry.
Jennifer and Chris share the importance of the body when creating music and art. Jennifer shares how she overcame her mind/body split caused by her upbringing through a traditional religion, which denied the body. She unconsciously believed that the mind was more important than the body, but now she knows that is entirely wrong. We are one undivided self: mind, body, and spirit.
How does the body come into play? According to Jennifer, what is happening in the body correlates with what is occurring mentally and emotionally inside of us. You must get to the source of the problem, which is how you think. When we have thoughts of judgment, fear, or anxiety, it affects our bodies. As children, we often develop fears of the creative process. When we introduce anxiety or fear into the equation, it is translated as tension in our body. It reveals itself in our artistry when we grip our bodies or grind our teeth.
According to Jennifer, art is a minimalist process, a subtractive technique. When you get all the excess stuff out of the way and leave only you, you allow the ideas to come through you. They will be shaped by the container that you are in. When musicians play, it is never the same way twice.
Jennifer emphasizes the importance of recognizing that you don't know what is coming through you, but you are open to discovering it. Her process involves the whole self, mind, body, and spirit. If we do not examine our whole selves, then unpleasant habits creep in.
She emphasizes the importance of being carefree instead of being too careful or careless. It is the middle space where we find our freedom. Jennifer reviews her "Art of Freedom Method," which has five life pillars: purpose, mind, body, spirit, and artistry.
She describes this as a conscious awareness or being the witness to ourselves. It's about being present with curiosity. Jennifer and Chris agree that the creative process involves letting oneself become an instrument of something more significant than our little self. Jennifer reminds the listener that we become open to experiencing our artistry when curious and aware.
For more information on Jennifer, visit her Facebook community https://www.facebook.com/groups/J30DPC/ or her website at www.ArttofFreedom.me. Her unique and inspiring online coaching programs empower musicians of all kinds to break through personal blockages to healing, joy, and musical success.
In this episode, sculptress and mixed-media artist Molly Sanger Carpenter shares her process of listening. She starts with a sketch but listens to her inner self throughout the process and lets the image unwind. The sculptress uses oil-based modeling clay to create a latex rubber mold for her delightful frames. She often reuses her molds with different subject matter and has made over 30 unique molds. She completes each frame with unique mosaic and painted features.
CJ and Molly discuss how every artist has strengths in certain senses, whether audial, visual, or kinesthetic. While each of us is unique in this aspect, learning to trust the process and believe in the magic by listening to what's happening inside you as you create is essential.
As a Quaker, Molly has learned to “listen to the inner light" in the art studio. Another pillar of her faith is seeing God in others. She believes God is within everyone, no matter who they are.
CJ "sees God in everyone" or sees love in everyone instead. He shares his recent experience at JFK Airport, where he projected love onto every passing person. He encourages his listeners to try this practice the next time they are in public.
CJ and Molly refer to Elizabeth Gilbert's "Big Magic" and the concept of a creative muse. When we follow the guidance of this inner Muse, we receive endless amounts of creative inspiration. We learn to listen to the creative impulse and get our ego out of the way.
Molly recognizes that many artists are connected to where they are when they paint. She calls this a "sense of place." Is it necessary for your work to communicate that place when appealing to your client base? According to Molly, there is nothing inherently wrong with your work, whether it conveys a sense of place or not, but exhibiting it in the right place is vital.
CJ classifies Molly's work as "Whimsical Romanticism," noting that it does reflect her place in Southern New Jersey: immense skies, sunsets, and wide-open spaces.
The podcast concludes when CJ and Molly agree that artists reach people and can choose to "Be Love" for others.
Molly Sanger Carpenter works from her Salem, NJ, farmhouse studio. Trained in classical sculpture techniques and materials, she now often incorporates elements of mixed media to create her artworks. Her current focus is creating "fine and unusual" art icons, combining sculpture, glass, paint, and 24k gold elements.
Molly has her work in many galleries on the East Coast. Molly has been featured in exhibitions throughout the Mid-Atlantic and beyond over a decorated 40-year career, including many galleries and venues in Delaware, New Jersey, Philadelphia, and NYC. She has an upcoming show in Traverse City, Michigan, in the Higher Art Gallery.
For more information on Molly, visit https://mollycarpenter.com. She can also be found on Instagram by searching for @mollyscarpenter.
For more information on CJMiller and his spiritual art retreats, visit https://spiritualartistoday.com. He can also be found on Instagram by searching for thespiritualartistpodcast.
There is a force behind all things, and Chris calls it Creative Intelligence. He sees this force most clearly in the natural world, where an abundance of plant and animal life continues to increase and multiply. He shares that to practice creativity, we must first form a belief. We must believe that what we desire is possible. Then, we must continue to expand the boundaries of that belief to experience greater and greater creativity.
He shares how this process worked for him in 2023, when he left a secure corporate position to pursue his art, speaking, and teaching practice. Chris discusses his most recent experience going beyond his edge of belief by participating in a pop-up art show in Dallas. His installation fees were higher than expected, throwing him into a fear spiral. He began to question his belief in Creative Intelligence.
As artists, we must have faith and belief by stepping out and trying new things. Are there things beyond your comfort zone? Is the idea of that goal pushing beyond your belief? Do you really believe?
What to you do when you challenge the edge of your belief? Write down your desire. When we set our desires, we attract countless possibilities.
Then, review your life history and check all of the times you stepped beyond your comfort zone and were met with success. Write down at least ten things. These are miracles that occurred in your life.
Shore up your belief and support it with previous success. Everything you have achieved came from a creative desire and was answered by Creative Intelligence.
Next, list what you can believe in. Start small and create a possibility list. If I can believe this, then maybe, just maybe, I can believe that.
As you go into the new year, expand your belief. Finally, see yourself achieving what you desire in your mind's eye.
Trust that Creative Intelligence will deliver. For more information, visit www.spiritualartistoday.com. CJ's book, "The Spiritual Artist,” is available on Amazon.
Podcast host CJMiller invites Muralist and Multi-disciplinary Artist Alex Cook to return to the show to discuss his "Your Are Loved" mural ministry and share his thoughts on empowering emotions.
Alex recently completed a newly commissioned 11' by 55' mural in Downtown Dallas' Thanksgiving Square with a slightly altered message of "Love People." The Thanksgiving Foundation's mission is to come together on common ground to negotiate differences and create understanding and appreciation of our diversity.
Alex shares his technique of geometric painting that explores color, line, and pattern on a large scale. He chooses to simplify letters into geometric shapes and notes that we, as a culture, agree that certain curves and lines have meaning. He explains that murals give a community a way to express their beliefs.
Alex doesn't choose to control the creative process; it's about letting in new ideas. He doesn't push himself out of his comfort zone but pursues what interests him passionately.
Alex has created a mural ministry to promote the concept of "You Are Loved." Alex believes that when people feel loved, it makes a difference. His murals are present in 24 states, and his goal is to have one in every state.
The artist shares how a passerby was affected by his message and tries to decide if she should forgive someone. The statement triggered her reflection. Alex believes it is the artist's job to be available and answer these questions.
According to Alex, we focus too much on negativity and don't notice the childlike positivity many people exhibit daily. He believes that we can create a culture where it is safe to love.
The podcast ends with CJ questioning the role of emotions in the creative process. According to Alex, we are more profound beings than our emotions. Feelings can lead us to a deeper place, but sometimes they can block us. Sometimes, he chooses to abandon what he feels is in service to his greater desire to make good art.
We navigate the wilderness with our eyes on Spirit, and the Northstar is love.
Alex Cook is a multi-disciplinary artist living in Boston, MA. Since 1997, he has created over 240 murals in 22 states and six countries. In 2014, he made the YOU ARE LOVED Mural Project. He has written and recorded six albums of original songs and performs around the US. He recently released a book, "You Are Loved, Spiritual and Creative Adventures, A Memoir". He is an avid basketball player and collector of art books. For more information, you can follow Alex on Instagram @stonebalanceart or visit his website https://stonebalancer.com
CJ opens this podcast by pondering the concept of gratitude. He shares his appreciation for a great year, including multiple speaking engagements at several art groups and Artisan Santa Fe, his successful solo show "Emotional RollerCoaster," and his first Spiritual Artist Retreat at Lake Texoma, north of Dallas.
He mentions that the highlight of his Spiritual Artist Retreat was realizing the importance of finding an art community. He encourages the listeners to find a local group of artists in their community.
According to Chris, gratitude is shifting consciousness and aligning yourself with this higher power. Creativity occurs in a space of gratitude and love. Align yourself with the love of everything around you and put yourself in that space where you can receive divine intuition from Spirit.
He shares his Receptivity Chart and explains that Spirit speaks to us always, but when we are in love and gratitude, we hear the message most clearly. He describes a simple gratitude practice where you use your fingers to count up to 10 things you are grateful for and the importance of starting small. Slowly work yourself up to more substantial and decisive points of gratitude until you mention at least ten things. It will become easier and easier to feel gratitude.
We always have the choice to feel fear or see ease in any situation. Still, when we use a gratitude practice, we align with Divine Intelligence and open our receptivity channel to its guidance.
For more information, visit www.spiritualartistoday.com or purchase his book, "The Spiritual Artist" on Amazon.
CJMiller podcaster sits down with Las Vegas, New Mexico, Print Maker and Artist Julie Sola to discuss the importance of working from within and focusing on what excites you. Julie sells her work at several markets, including the Santa Fe Railyard Artisan Market.
Drawing on early childhood memories of her grandparents and Mexican culture, she focuses on whimsical images of animals. Owner of Fat Crow Press, Julie Sola shares how her work tells a story. Her business, aptly named Fat Crow Press, is based on crows because she feels that crows are loud, noisy, and demanding. According to Julie, crows ask us to get a grip and move on.
CJ and Julie discuss the importance of creating what makes you happy and interest you. Julie doesn't worry about trends; she focuses on what comes from her heart. "If I like it and it brings me joy, there has to be others that resonate with it," she said.
Based on her Mexican heritage, Julie likes to use animals to convey a story, and it is up to the reader to determine what they are seeing. Julie enjoys creating a narrative with her work driven by imagery rather than words. She has two books available via most bookstores and Amazon, "Run Fast, Milo!" and "Possum Dreams."
Chris reminds the listeners to view abundance in many ways, not just financial. There's an abundance of time, flexibility, friends, health, choice, and more.
Julie lives by Abraham Maslow's phrase, "You will either step forward into growth, or you will step backward into safety."
We all have moments, like oh, it wasn't a good day at the market, but you have to be brave and keep moving. We are artists for the rest of our lives. Julie shares her new obsession, "RoadRunners," and explains that her process starts with an idea that she sketches, draws onto linoleum, and then prints. Her work seems to develop a touch of whimsy as her process evolves.
Julie and CJ discuss the PBS Series Craft in America. The show highlights the maker community throughout America and the importance of taking pride in your culture and learning a craft.
"I'm in love with what I'm doing, so I'm going to keep going," she said.
For more information or to purchase her work, visit https://fatcrowpress.com/. For more details of CJ’s work, visit www.spiritualartisttoday.com. His book, "The Spiritual Artist,” is available on Amazon.
CJ Miller takes a break from painting to share his experience of feeling blue and depressed. He encourages the listener to feel the emotion and keep on painting. When we feel our emotions, they process through us and take us to a new place. He also discusses his childhood experience with Seasonal Depression Disorder and how he learned to walk through emotions he cites a recent interview with Dr. Jane Gardner who explains the Emotional Scale and how we must feel an emotion completely before moving on to the next step. Watch “How do Emotions Hold Us Back from Creativity with Dr. Jayne Gardner” for more information. CJ reminds us to keep painting.
A pdf of the emotional scale is listed on the Spiritual Artist Today website in the Practice Guides section. What sad song is CJ really into right now? "Dear Insecurity" by Brandi Clark featuring Brandi Carlisle.
https://open.spotify.com/album/5vLQakn5RIIinS715tqgjI Learn more about CJ, his podcast, book, and retreats by visiting www.spiritualartisttoday.com.
CJ Miller invites Scottsdale, Arizona gallery owner and art blog educator Jason Horejs (pronounced Horsh) into his recording studio to challenge misconceptions about best artist practices. Jason’s recent blog titled, “Why Artists Should Focus On Quantity Over Quality,” caused an online stir.
Jason unpacks the benefits of focusing on quantity over quality and shares his experience on how galleries work, how to approach galleries and create long-lasting relationships with them.
According to Jason, some quality can only come through quantity. By focusing on output and striving to increase production we grow as artists. He notes a parallel between artists that are successful and prolific. The more work you put into the world, the larger your success. He declares that we should aim for both; quantity and quality.
Multiple benefits come from shifting into a quantity mindset. An artist should review their current level of production and increase it by 25%. Artists may labor over artwork longer than they should according to Jason. CJ and Jason discuss Malcolm Gladwell’s 10,000-hour rule. There is no substitute for being in the studio and creating.
CJ shares the importance of following your intuition; quantity makes you better and better at following that conversation and listening to that impulse.
He shares three key additional points; you deserve to be in a gallery, it’s a numbers game, and develop a consistent brand.
Jason encourages artists to know that they are good enough to get into galleries. There are many different galleries and there is a place for your work. The key is to align it with collector interests and demands. Start the process of locating galleries immediately.
What does a gallery consider when choosing an artist? An artist should focus on creating consistent and cohesive work. When a gallery sells a work they need to do marketing, promote your work, and sell it multiple times. If your work is completely different, that process has to be restarted each time.
When you find a passion in a style, dive deep into it. Find a common thread in your work that ties it all together and demonstrate consistency in at least five of these areas: subject matter, color palette, style, thematic elements, medium, and presentation.
Finally, once you start approaching galleries remember that it’s a number game; approach many, many galleries. You’ll go through many no’s before you get a yes’s. Use the mindset of approaching 100’s of galleries.
Jason claims Nike’s tagline, “Just do it,” when creating art, and keep in mind the logistics of building a successful art business.
My solo show closes this weekend, and I'm taking a short respite in Santa Fe. I decided to re-release one of my favorite story-telling episodes about friends, trust, and guidance. I hope you enjoy this early episode
A Recap:
Listen to this heartwarming story about Chris' recent trip to Santa Fe. After taking several weeks off from producing "The Spiritual Artist Podcast," host Christopher Miller shares his harrowing adventure through the hills of Santa Fe to visit a sick friend. Chris initially met artist Carolyn on his first journey to New Mexico and felt a deep desire to visit her during a time of need. A flat tire, an intermittent phone signal, and rocky terrain challenge him to understand the true meaning of control and Spiritual guidance. He is reminded to seek those moments of awe; look for beauty, release control, and trust his Spiritual guidance.
For more information, consider purchasing a copy of "The Spiritual Artist" on Amazon or visiting http://www.spiritualartisttoday.com.
Trans femme, genderqueer spiritual drag artist Bonnie Violet shares how the creative process out pictures in her drag performances and speaking engagements. She has learned to lean into Grace to expand her role as an artist and let her inner child out.
As a child, she was constantly told that she was not masculine enough or big enough by her father, but drag lets her lean in and embrace her femineity. She explains how today's gay, lesbian, biracial, and trans stereotypes limit our full creative expression. Our relationship to how we see ourselves impacts how we approach our lives.
"When you see me, if you only see a trans person, then you don't see me," she said. "There's more to me than that."
Bonnie Violet shares her definition of grace. When we recognize our grace, we realize that we are already worthy. We don't practice creativity to make ourselves whole; we are creative just because.
She explains how grace has expanded her view of life. She uses the definition of a White House as a metaphor. When a 10-year-old defines the term "White House," it differs from that of a 40-year-old. Our understanding of what "a white house" means enlarges. We can lean into our knowledge.
Bonnie has learned to embrace herself wholeheartedly and continues to reveal parts of her that were always there; that is the gift of being a queer, trans, drag artist. She has the opportunity to push limits and boundaries.
Grace puts God back into her life. Bonnie Violet explains that she gets to be part of her creation. She is a co-creator with the creator and has agency. Her creator is always with her.
Bonnie ends the interview by reminding the listener that art helps us stop long enough to be present with ourselves. She has chosen to lace her narrative with a spiritual threat and enjoys teaching that process to others.
Bonnie Violet is a trans femme genderqueer spiritual drag artist and digital chaplain. She is a YouTuber & Host of a queer chaplain podcast with such series as Drag & Spirituality, TranSpirit & Faith Leaders.
She co-hosts Splintered Grace with her conservative Christian aunt & At the CCC recovery podcast.
Creator and founder of Allies Linked for the Prevention of HIV & AIDS (a.l.p.ha.), the annual Drag & Spirituality Summit.
Bonnie Violet shares her experience, strength, and hope with HIV for 24 years, recovering from drugs, alcohol, and sexual assault, among other things, for 14 years in classrooms, community centers, churches, online, and pretty much anywhere else she is invited.
As a queer chaplain, she is present with people in death and dying to self by helping to lace one's narrative with a spiritual thread to remind one of their resilience, strengthen faith in self, create serenity in the now, and instill hope for their future.
For more information on Christopher J. Miller, visit www.spiritualartisttoday.com or purchase his book on Amazon.
The podcast host gives a Spiritual Artist Chat about the importance of being like a child. We're always told, "Don't be Childish," but Chris tells the listener to do the opposite. He shares his experience while taking an old-fashioned bubble bath and the importance of using water to become more present.
Notice the light hitting the bubbles, the sensation of the water on your skin, and the way the steam rises from the bath. Avoid creating a to-do list or thinking of ways to improve your life situation while enjoying your bath. As an option, he encourages the listener to bathe, shower, swim in the pool or go to a public park with a water fountain. Water grounds us to the present moment.
He explains how most of us try to solve a problem by changing a physical manifestation rather than focusing on staying in the space of spirit. By being a child, we access our inner intuition and guidance.
The spiritual realm is much stronger than the physical realm. An idea or thought is more potent than any manifestation. You don't need to do anything but be present to the spirit in you reacting to the world around you, and then creativity happens.
Creative Earth Coach and Artist Claire Takahashi explains the practice of creating a Morning Altar or Earth Art from natural objects. She guides her students through the process of creative sculptures with grass, rocks, leaves, seeds, and petals found in a wandering process.
Claire believes it is essential to realign ourselves with nature to restore creativity and live more colorful lives. Morning altars are a tool to tap into your imagination and what you're feeling in the present moment. Using petals, the gifts of the Earth, to build something.
She refers to David Abrams b book, "Becoming Animal" in which he explains that we have lost our connection to this planet and have become isolated from nature. She advises listeners to engage in a morning practice of connecting with nature, whether through a brief walk, taking off our shoes and connecting with the Earth, or building a morning altar.
Podcast host Christopher Miller explains the importance of calming practice before entering the art studio. It's in a ritual that we align ourselves with a Greater Power.
Claire is a self-taught artist who shares her watercolor experience and its fluid characteristics. She often incorporates natural objects in her work and is attracted to the unpredictable nature of watercolors.
Chris and Claire share their experiences with different paper and board mediums, including the difference between hot and cold press paper. They advise the listener to be present and notice the difference in art materials.
She shares her process for listening, which includes wandering in nature and noticing what is speaking to you, pausing in place, and then letting the site wander around you. Ask yourself, how is she (nature) smelling, tasting, and speaking?
Next time you drive around, lower your windows, smell the air, and be more present. She cautions, "Nature isn't always comfortable, but nature is honest."
Claire Takahashi is a Creative Earth Coach, meditative guide, and artist of paint, petals, and words. She is certified as a Wayfinder Coach and a Morning Altar Teacher.
Through her 1:1 coaching, creative workshops and Earth art guidance, Claire helps other humxns to reconnect with the Earth in their bones, uncage their inner creatures, and live with more colorful and restorative creativity.
Claire is also the host of The Mindful Creature podcast, guided meditations for reconnecting with our creature cousins and calming our inner landscape.
Besides her coaching and workshops, she is working on her first poetry collection and the second season of The Mindful Creature. Claire lives in the Pacific Northwest on Coast Salish lands, and most days, you can find her spattered with soil, paint, fur, or all three!
You can find out more about Claire or join her monthly creative creature newsletter at www.clairetakahashi.com or find her on Instagram @claire.takahashi
Podcast host Christopher Miller sits with Irish Mixed Media Artist Iseult McCormack to discuss her upcoming solo show, "When I Close My Eyes."
Iseult paints intuitively, drawing inspiration from the universe of her dreams and emotions. Her work explores the interplay between chaos and harmony while inviting viewers to connect and find their meaning in each piece.
The artist believes in practicing the presence of love when she is in a flow state. Iseult shares her disappointment with overly planned paintings. Instead, she chooses to practice emotional presence when painting her spontaneous work.
In recent years, Iseult learned to stop trying to please others, let go and allow herself to make mistakes. As a Spiritual Artist, she listens to her intuitive voice, co-creates with some sort of higher power, and relishes being in that warm, comfortable place of connection. Iseult often uses writing to jump-start a blank canvas and is fearless in making big moves.
She quotes writer Madalyn Beck, "Start over, my darling, be brave enough to find the life you want and courageous enough to chase it. Then start over and love yourself how you're always meant to."
She ends the interview by reminding the listener to "notice what you noticed" and be a mindful creative artist.
Iseult (E-sul-t) McCormack is an intuitive abstract artist from Bray, County Wicklow, working in mixed media. Iseult has delved into numerous mediums and traversed many creative paths, leading her to a place of profound peace and fulfillment. Within this realm, she thrives, translating her innermost visions onto canvas and inviting viewers into the ethereal landscapes of her dreams.
For more information on Iseult, follow her on Facebook, https://www.facebook.com/iseultmccormackcreations/
Join podcast host Christopher Miller as he explores the philosophical and spiritual implications of making AI art with artist Jeff Perkins.
Jeff is an AI artist who seeks to use artificial intelligence to create stunning artwork. Blending technology with creativity, Jeff would like to be part of the movement to expand the art world's horizons using artificial intelligence.
Chris challenges Jeff to answer, "Do you believe that when you make a digital image, there is a spiritual reflection of who you are contained in the final work?"
Jeff explains that he feels the presence of something other than himself in his process and defines the experience as a form of co-creation. He does find himself experiencing flow when working on an image.
Jeff begins the interview by presenting the term Digital Perspectivism. Digital Perspectivism is the view that reality is an abstraction; we perceive it from our perspective. In essence, this term means that all realities are valid, but all are different.
He suggests that when we deal with others in life, we can be more compassionate and understanding toward them if we accept the idea of perspectivism.
AI art can democratize art-making because it is now available to everyone with or without traditional training. However, he cautions that there is much to be discussed regarding ownership and copywriting of original work but believes that by using AI to create, we can expand the horizons of the art world. AI is forcing us to question what identity is. What is the ethical way of handling someone's digital persona? How do we address these concerns?
Jeff briefly explains the process of entering a prompt, regenerating the results, and experiencing random effects. Randomness is built into the AI logarithm. According to Jeff, with every regeneration, we see the results mutating. However, each time we decide to regenerate an image, we are bringing ourselves into the creation of the project. We co-create with artificial intelligence.
Jeff has found himself exploring gender and sexuality roles in his imagery because he wants to see images affirming his identity. LGBTQ themes are a significant area of focus for Jeff, who lives with his husband, artist Michael Duncan, in Dallas, Texas. He takes a digital perspectivist approach to AI art that seeks to validate diverse experiences mediated through digital technology.
Chris and Jeff discuss the variable of randomness built into AI systems. They don't respond to the same prompt the same way each time. If your prompt is too specific, it can hinder the AI's ability to make adaptations. Learning to be open to random results is another trait of a spiritual artist.
At the conclusion of the interview, Chris and Jeff reviewed the experience of making digital art. They noted many spiritual similarities between traditional and artificial intelligence systems when creating new work.
You can find examples of Jeff’s work on Instagram by visiting: jeffperkins_1452.
Creativity is a way to let emotions flow through you. When we express feelings, we facilitate the experience, but when they are repressed, they block our access to higher thinking and intuition. In this episode, Dr. Jayne Gardner, Performance Business Coach with a background in family therapy, explains that buried emotions never die, but they make us sick.
According to Dr. Jayne, our emotions are part of our brain. We like to believe that we are thinking rational beings, but we are usually emotionally reactive. Learning to manage your emotions is critical to thinking higher innovative thoughts. Many of us have been taught to think through problems, not feel through difficulties. In the podcast, Dr. Jaynes uses her hand to demonstrate the three parts of the brain; the thinking, emotion and bodily functions brains.
Dr. Jayne says the emotional brain can be more potent than the thinking brain. How do our brains feel emotions? The assumptions you made as a child form your belief systems, and they unconsciously lead you around.
The more you allow your natural emotions to be there, the more you can move up the emotional scale. You can download a copy of this scale by visiting www.spiritualartisttoday.com/practiceguides.
Dr. Jayne shares how a history of childhood emotional repression and the unwritten expectation that women cannot convey certain emotions blocked her from accessing her best thoughts. She explains the importance of feeling anger and uses an "anger bat" in privacy to move through the state. According to Dr. Jayne, that sound goes directly into your emotional brain when you scream. Screaming is the fastest way to eliminate any emotion.
Our pure potential is limited until we release these negative emotional connections from the past. She advises the listener to go back and talk to their younger self and ask him/her/they how the experience felt. Dr. Jayne believes that we have to relive that experience and feel the emotion until we rise to and through the point of anger.
She shares a few tips for processing emotions; practice awareness, take action, journal in the first and third person, and face the feeling. When we integrate our mental and emotional intelligence, we improve our access to our intuition and creativity.
The conversation includes discussing Brene Brown's book, "I Thought It Was Me."
For more information on Dr. Jayne Gardner and further reading material, visit https://drjaynegardner.com/ For more information on The Spiritual Artist podcast, visit www.spiritualartistoday.com
Dr. Lori Eanes, D.O., Author, and Corporate Wellness Speaker, shares her "Five Simple Solutions for a Healthier Lifestyle" with podcast Host Christopher Miller. Chris is having a frazzled morning when Dr. Lori advises him to stop, listen and retrain his brain.
At no time have we ever had so much information and distraction, and it's leading to a mental disorder. Dr. Lori says," We have to control the mind and not let the mind control us."
According to Dr. Lori, Americans consume 50% of all the drugs manufactured worldwide. We have become an overly medicated society. Integrative medicine balances the wisdom of history with the science of today
Dr. Lori teaches integrative medicine, which uses all forms of healing, including herbology, nutrition, mind-body medicine, exercise therapy, and meditation.
She encourages the listener to ask their doctor what they do for their wellbeing. She doesn't focus on how to treat an illness but, more importantly, why we get sick.
The conversation mentions Louise L. Hay's "Heal Your Body" book, which matches mental causes for physical illness. If you have digestive issues, Dr. Lori asks, "What in your life on your not stomaching?" Look for the why of disease and disorder. What was happening when this occurred?
The podcast host reminds the seeker always to remember the Law of Cause and Effect. We can't get more healing and less medicine until we get to the cause.
Distracted? Dr. Lori resets her nervous system to a Zero Point every morning by turning her phone off and meditating or dancing. It's essential to gather your energy so that it is concentrated and focused on where you want to be.
Five simple solutions are taken from Dan Buettner's book, "The Blue Zones.
The Blue Zone describes a place on the planet where people live longer, healthier lives. What are they doing that contributes to this wellbeing?
Dr. Lori shares Five Simple Solutions for a healthier lifestyle.
Look at your constitution and develop a personalized health plan for yourself. According to Dr. Lora, "Doctors shouldn't just treat you; they should teach you."
For more information or coaching, visit https://www.drlorieanes.com/
After visiting Daniela Pasqualini at her show, Podcaster Chris Miller furthers the conversation by asking about self-marketing, spirituality, and more. Daniela uses gratitude as a creative spiritual practice and radiates incredible positive energy.
When approaching a lousy day, she uses routine, exercise, and focus to move through them. She uses exercise to free her mind and sets an intention every week. Daniela uses heavy texture in her paintings achieved through acrylic and impasto. Her work is to be seen and felt and, depending on perspective, has a feeling of movement.
In the interview, she deconstructs her thought process behind a painting titled "Mesmerizing Waterfall." The image illustrates mediation's goal: to step back from our thoughts and get out of our minds.
Daniela concentrates on marketing your art business in the second half of the interview. She introduces the BLEND acronym. B stands for “Be Open” to criticism. Not everyone will like your work. L stands for “Learn””. Learn everything you can about marketing and organizational skills. E stands for “educate yourself.” N stands for “networking” and supporting other artists. D stands for "Don't Give Up" and "Don't Compare Yourself to Other Artists."
She recommends concentrating on one social media channel and focuses much of her efforts on Instagram. She primarily uses videos and reels to post on the channel. Her marketing content mix is 60% showing and advertising what you do, 20% educational, and the remaining 20% entertaining. She ensures she hits these goals by creating a content calendar based on each weekday. The artist recommends using an Instagram business account so you can check the metrics. Other tips include making shorter clips, using trending music, and adding a hook to the beginning of the clip. A call to action should be at the end of each post.
Gratitude and positive energy are your most potent marketing tools. Daniela is a self-taught Italian-born artist now living in Dallas.
Daniela has been featured in countless exhibitions worldwide, including locations like the Vatican and the Louvre. She is represented in galleries across the globe, including Asia, Europe, and here in the United States, and has been featured as a best-selling artist." The active artist has three children under the age of 11. For more information about Daniela, visit www.danielapasqualini.com and on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/art_by_dany/
Artist Rebecca Collins returns to The Spiritual Artist Podcast. Rebecca Collins is a mixed media artist working in mosaic, collage, watercolor and digital arts and was Chris’ first podcast interview more than two year ago.
Rebecca reminds listeners about the importance of slowing down and being present to the process both as a teacher and as an artist. As a teacher Rebecca is very aware of time; she wants to ensure that each student completes the process.
Rebecca has been diagnosed with Stage 4 Cancer for more than 8 years and shares the importance of enjoying each day and recalls a lifetime of meeting deadlines and high productivity. As a greeting card illustrator, she produced a dozen/dozen card sets at one time. Learning to group her tasks as a mosaic artist.At this time, she has decided to focus more on her larger pieces that take longer to produce.
Rebecca revisits her mantra, “The more you do, the more you can do.” She realizes that it’s a true statement but it no longer serves her. We can choose new beliefs. As Spiritual Artists we constantly reexamine our beliefs. Rebecca notes that when we work slower, we increase our stamina and can work longer.
Rebecca explains that by slowing her body she can slow down her thoughts. Mosaics are very therapeutic because they are like working a puzzle. Rebecca uses drawing to slow her mind and be present. She explains how to see by drawing upside down. It’s learning to see what what is there and not what we think is there. She emphasizes the importance of seeing with fresh eyes.
When receiving her 3-hour transfusions, Rebecca started a series of healthy cell drawings and self-portraits to chronicle her journey through healing.
Rebecca teaches at the Creative Arts Center, Makers Connect Gallery and in her home studio. For more information, visit
Are you in the channel of love? Are you practicing love consciousness? After Podcast host Christopher Miller spends the afternoon volunteering in the Equity Texas booth during Carrollton Pride, he realizes that we have one resource that will never run out; love.
Why celebrate LGBTQ diversity? Because diversity inspires creativity. Chris notices the incredible creativity in dress and expression. Each attendee demonstrates their self-love through their clothing and generosity.
Why do we often find ourselves hesitant to practice love? What are we afraid of? We have two main reasons we resist love; we're worried that we only have so much available, and we think we must be totally like those we love.
Real love isn't limited. When we love one thing, it doesn't take our love away from us. There is no limitation to the amount of love we can share, and when we love and accept others, it doesn't make us all alike.
If those reasons aren't enough, Chris explains a practical reason to demonstrate love. When we practice love consciousness to release creativity, we create possibilities. When we are feeling love, we are most aligned with Spirit. When we are in a state of love without judgment or fear, that is when creativity and ideas flow. These ideas have no limitation to solving any world crisis.
Are you in the channel of love? Chris encourages the listener to practice loving those they encounter this week despite whether they are like you or of the same beliefs.
In this episode, Dallas-based multi-media artist Ann DeRulle shares how she receives intuitive guidance to create her transformative, inspirational, and uplifting paintings. She sees an image or hears words instructing her to create detailed pictures that display sacred geometry, often tiered through plexiglass layers that emanate transformative energy.
Ann and Chris discuss her creative process and how she receives Divine Guidance to make art that resonates with energy. Chris experiences an "aha" moment when he realizes that he can receive guidance during the planning stage of a project as well as during the creative act.
According to Ann, humanity is migrating from an external world of 3-D external sustenance to a 5-D world of eternal sustenance. She deconstructs her "Love Without End" painting to share how her geometry, grids, color choice, line work, and position provide an energetic charge. Other images in her 5-D Transformative Series include Evolution, Inspiration, Consciousness Manifested, and Ascension.
Ann's ever-evolving work synthesizes 25+ years of scientific/spiritual/art study, including more than 15 energy-balancing modalities plus intuition. In addition to her artistic creations, Ann provides energy healing to individuals and environmental remediation to home and office locations through her Quantum Solutions business.
Ann asks the listeners to recognize themselves and their environment. What are you resonating with that you don't want to be resonating with? And what do you want to resonate with?
Ann DeRulle founded Life Changes Unlimited in 1997 and integrates 25 years of scientific and spiritual training in personal empowerment consultations using her exclusive Quantum Solutions process. Ann also clears toxic, detrimental energies in our homes and offices by transforming them into positive, life-enhancing energy through her Zapp Technique. For more information, visit https://annderulleart.com.
Dallas Glass Artist Amy Voss shares her process for making glass sculptures from damaged guitars, dealing with criticism of your art, and other essential life lessons.
Amy was passionate about music and was attracted to creating art from old guitars. She explains that she avoids huge grout lines by cutting precise glass and using Frit and gold leaf gilding. She doesn't use resin on the entire face of the guitar because it creates a manufactured look; she prefers leaving a raw, organic look to her glass sculpture.
During the interview, Amy and Chris discussed the importance of being present while working and spending the appropriate amount of time. According to Amy, you enjoy the process for what it is, or you shouldn't be doing it. Ourr art comes from a place that is personal to the artist. What's important about your art is your experience when you make it.
Amy and Chris discuss stepping out in embarrassment. Amy often stands anonymously by her work during a show while listening to the viewers' comments.
Amy encourages artists not to respond to negative criticism. She needed her life experiences to learn how to let things go. Get to a point when you have zero fucks to give. Surround yourself with people that do get you. Take the good with the bad, and don't take it personally. Sometimes making your point and making yourself heard happens by being silent.
You cannot separate personal growth from creativity. According to Amy, life imitates art. The more confidence you have in your work, the better your work is going to be.
Amy grew up in Houston, TX, and graduated from Southern Methodist University in Dallas. After graduating college, Amy worked in the entertainment industry as Southwest Promotions Director for Lyric Street Records, Affiliate Relations Director for ESPN Radio and ABC Television network.
A self-taught artist, Amy experimented with various approaches before she landed on her signature style: One-of-a-kind glass sculptures that incorporate the body of an acoustic guitar as the canvas.
In 2009, she launched glass Axes to sell bespoke works and educate customers about her process. Many of Amy's guitar sculptures have been acquired by private collectors, including entertainer Katy Perry and renowned entertainment industry execs, hotels, and restaurants. She is currently represented in Europe by Hiren Kothari of Gallery Privé. Amy currently resides in Dallas with her husband and son.
For more information about Amy, visit https://glassaxes.com/
International Coach and Senior Trainer for the More to Life Foundation Ann McMaster shares how the More to Life methodology reveals your Real Reality.
More to Life is based on Dr. K. Bradford Brown and Dr. W. Roy Whitten's training program that enables people to make fundamental changes. Their premise is to be awake to reality– the reality of our essence, relationships, and the moment and circumstance in which we find ourselves.
Ann walks Podcast Host Christopher J. Miller through one of his recent Lifeshock experiences to demonstrate how the process works. After we experience a Lifeshock, we interpret the experience based on our current situation and belief systems. This response is known as Mindtalk. With clarity, we revisit the Lifeshock and ask ourselves three questions. Are our thoughts true or false, or do we simply not know? The process helps us live in the real world instead of one made up in our heads. The ultimate goal is learning to live our true destiny.
Ann aligns herself with this saying, "I am who I am, You Are who you are. My journey is my Journey; Your Journey is not my journey. And all journeys work in the big scheme of things."
To understand more about the thinking mind, the feeling heart, and the knowing gut, Ann refers the listener to another book titled "Mbraining: Using your multiple brains to do cool stuff" by Grant Soosalu and Marvin Oka.
Ann reminds the listener of one undeniable truth, "We belong right here, right now."
Ann McMaster has been training, coaching, and working with people from Europe, New Zealand/Australia/Fiji, Mexico, Colombia, and South Africa – where she lived for two years. She is a psychotherapist, trainer, consultant, and coach. She has worked with people across the US, the UK, Mexico, South America, Spain, Switzerland, Brussels, Trinidad and Tobago, New Zealand, Australia, Fiji, and South Africa, where she lived for two years.
As a Senior Trainer for the More To Life Foundation, she has also led courses for the Federal Bureau of Prisons in Texas and California. She has been a consultant for the New Mexico State Prison System. She is the author of "Lifeshocks Out of the Blue: Learning from your Life's Experiences," available on Amazon.com.
She loves working with people and learning about new ways to make a difference in the world. You can check her out at www.annmcmaster.com. For more information about More to Life events, visit www.moretolife.org.
Podcast Host Christopher Miller got out of the "wrong side of the bed" this morning and feels anxious. In the episode, he shares the importance of accepting your emotions and letting them take you on a journey.
How do you process negative emotions? By accepting and feeling them completely. Emotions are what make us humans and connect us to others. Let your feelings take you to that next creative place. Ram Dass states, "As long as you have certain desires about how it ought to be, you can't see how it is."
Part of being a Spiritual Artist is surrendering to what is. You can't resist your emotions, whether it's what you're experiencing in the art studio or in your life. Chris explains what he means by saying, "Be still. Listen. And know that you are a Spiritual Artist."
He reminds listeners of the importance of having a spiritual practice and reading something inspiring first thing in the morning. He references the Guide for Spiritual Living magazine published by the Centers for Spiritual Living.
Ask yourself, "How do I feel right now?" Whatever the answer, accept what it is.
For more information or to download a practice guide, visit www.spiritualartisttoday.com.
Podcast host, Christopher J. Miller shares his three-step process to move from disbelief to belief. Sometimes we feel blocked by our beliefs when changing our lives. How do we change our life situation? We change our limiting beliefs.
First, start by cracking open the door and just considering the possibility. We once believed that man couldn't fly, but it's possible today. Our ancestors wouldn't have believed that we could land on the moon or communicate without wires.
Second, claim a similar experience from your past. Look back in your history and see where you achieved something you considered impossible. Download the Practice Guide online and make a list of past successes.
Third, do a multisensory visualization. Close your eyes and use all five senses to experience it in fruition. See it in your mind's eye. Hear it. Taste it. Touch it and experience the feeling of what it would be like once you achieve this creative manifestation.
For more information or to download a practice guide, visit www.spiritualartisttoday.com.
Sculptor, Painter, and Artist Curtis Frederick reveals his process toward achieving timeless flow. Curtis uses various spiritual exercises, including writing morning pages, turning off the mind, emotional release, and dance.
Curtis shares how he used Julia Cameron's Morning Pages process from her book, "The Artist's Way." The practice involves writing three pages of a stream of thought every morning. Podcast host Chris Miller elaborates that morning pages are an excellent opportunity to stand back and watch your thoughts from afar.
How do we get to that unplanned place? According to Curtis, the artwork will define itself when we let go, be vulnerable and embrace our imperfections during the creative process. He emphasizes that good artwork is about telling a story.
According to Curtis, the worse thing an artist can do is focus on what others want and what will make them happy. As artists, we should look within ourselves for expression. We often fall into the trap of looking for what's trending and trying to figure out the audience rather than letting our inner out.
Curtis emphasizes his desire to create emotional art. While cuisine, religion, and language vary worldwide, emotions are universal. He encourages artists to love themselves first and make time for creativity. We can be accepted if we express ourselves.
Curtis Frederick is an artist, sculptor, and painter in Dallas, Texas. He is an award-winning artist across the United States. Some of his exhibitions include Buchanan Center of the Arts (IL), Craven Art Council (NC), Farmington Museum (NM), Blue Line Arts (CA), Craighead Green Gallery (TX), Cooperstown Art Association (NY), Alexandria Museum of Art (LA), and Art League of Hilton Head (SC).
His work has also been featured in the book "Gate Posts With No Gate- The leg paint project"- Shanti Arts Publishing. For more information on his work, visit www.curtisfrederickfineart.com.
Is doubt holding you back from creativity? Podcast host Christopher Miller reminds you that you already have everything you need to create original, one-of-a-kind art right now.
Can I make magic happen on this canvas? Am I unique? Am I worthy? He shares a chapter from his book, "The Spiritual Artist," on the Intelligence of Being and asks listeners to recognize this intelligence within themselves.
How does a cantaloupe seed know how to grow? There is a certain logic, a system behind the cantaloupe contained in one tiny seed. It has an intelligence of being. We also have this built in design.
We recognize the intelligence within and simply let go. Accept what it is. Resist judgment and fear. And let the intelligence behind us walk us through the creative process.
If you doubt something, perhaps you're trying too hard. Trust that you are unique and special. You have an "Intelligence of Being" built within you.
Dorayne Breedlove is a storyteller, musician, artist, spiritual mentor, and teacher who leads drum circles and sacred circle dances. In this episode, she focuses on the practice of a labyrinth walk.
Unlike a maze, a labyrinth is not designed with choices. There is one path that twists and winds your way to the center of the circular maze. That same path is followed to exit. According to Breedlove, a labyrinth walk is a spiritual walk that serves as a metaphor for life; there are a lot of twists and turns—the challenge is to stay present.
Dorayne currently mentors children in a private learning association called The Pride. She provides project-based learning to these students and explains how she and her partner, Doug, instructed them to build a labyrinth near Austin, Texas. By entering a cycle in the middle of the location and using a long, marked rope in a compass-like manner, the group moved native rocks to define the path.
The conversation includes a mention of Lauren Artress's book called "Walking a Sacred Path: Rediscovering the Labyrinth as a Spiritual Practice.
Dorayne’s process starts with centering and connection. She sets an intention, whether to feel peace, process emotion, or gain insight about some life situation.
Dorayne uses the inward journey for RELEASE. While walking this portion of the path, she releases judgment, control, negative feelings, fear, and shoulds. She creates space to receive.
Once in the center, she RECEIVES impressions, guidance, insights, and intuitions.
After leaving the center, she RETURNS with gratitude, reflection, and thoughts of integration.
The podcast concludes with Dorayne sharing her enlightening thoughts from a recent walk. To find a labyrinth near you, visit www.labyrinthlocator.com. You can download a practice sheet on the Practice Guides subpage of www.spiritualartisttoday.com.
For more information on Dorayne's programs for people to connect within and with others to feel love, support, reverence, and relatedness, visit www.DorayneBreedlove.com
How can you be a better public speaker? Author and speaking coach Gail Larsen shares her transformation process with the listener. Each of us brings a gift to the world that is original and is our form of art. Transformational defines when things shift; through our internal growth and throughout the planet.
Gail’s book reviews all the technical skills of Speaking, but approaches speaking holistically, starting with the heart of your Speaking. She believes that your original talents and skills are your Original Medicine and encourages her students to name their medicine and stand in the power of it.
Her process distinguishes between the Comfort Zone of speaking and the Home Zone. The Comfort Zone encompasses the professional persona and credentials we traditionally associate with public speakers. The Home Zone defines your “Original Medicine” message and the story that only you can share. Gail says you find your audience if you are true to yourself.
When we speak from our Home Zone, we are present in the moment with our true story. It’s a place of vulnerability and truth. Gail believes that if what we share is not emotional, it will not touch the audience profoundly and transformatively.
She shares a favorite quote by Martin Shaw, an acclaimed teacher of myth and storyteller. He claims, “You don’t trap a story. You track it.” Gail’s methodology and concept were also influenced by Angeles Arrien and her book titled, “The Four-Fold Way: Walking the Paths of the Warrier, Teacher, Healer, and Visionary.
Gail Larsen is the author of Transformational Speaking: If You Want to Change the World, Tell a Better Story, Gail has been in the world of speaking for decades, first as an SBA award-winning entrepreneur and soon after that as the first full-time executive of the National Speakers Association.
Her study informs her work of cross-cultural and perennial wisdom. Her focus is on uncovering our true gifts before applying strategy so that our work is original, sustainable, and genuine. She offers Transformational Speaking to a global audience through her Online Academy and live immersions in Santa Fe, NM.
She served on the faculty of Omega Institute from 2008 until Covid! Several of her graduates have been named to Oprah’s Super Soul 100 as awakened leaders who use their voices and talents to elevate humanity. www.realspeaking.com
Women are often shamed for using skills traditionally attributed to a good salesperson. Miriam Thiel, a conscious business & life coach, helps women entrepreneurs connect the dots to feel good about marketing and sales conversations without giving up on integrity. Through her unique process of breathwork and belief examination, Miriam helps woman embrace their full potential.
In this episode, Miriam shares her personal sales journey and explains how being an introvert can benefit sales. She explains the importance of active listening and transparency in a business exchange. Miriam encourages radical change by recognizing when you are uncomfortable and locating the belief behind that feeling.
Before entering any conversation, you need to feel in balance with yourself. If you enter a conversation with fear, people notice that. Miriam encourages you to enter relationships with vulnerability and authenticity.
According to Miriam, listening is an excellent Superpower. We all want to be seen, heard, and understood. Empathy and care for the other are valuable to a sales relationship.
Create the space for the client and yourself to say “no” if necessary; you don’t need to work with everyone.
According to Miriam, we live in systems, and sometimes, these beliefs are deeply ingrained in both men and women. While some traits are encouraged in men and some in women, it’s when we become whole beings and welcome all qualities in ourselves that we arrive at true abundance.
Miriam uses Revelation Breathwork and cites one of her favorite books, “The Body Keeps the Score,” by Bessel A. Van der Kolk, for reference.
Women can embrace their “sales side” by focusing on their connection with others and how they bring a valuable service to them. If you’re scared, you’re focusing on yourself; focus on the other.
For more information, visit her website, https://www.miriamthiel.com, or follow her on Facebook at @itsmiriamthiel. More information about Chris is available a https://www.spiritualartisttoday.com
Podcast host Christopher Miller explains what it means when something or someone is not on your path. Citing a real-life example, Chris shares his frustration when someone is not genuine and how he learned the importance of listening to his intuition. People aren’t always self-aware. Sometimes they’re just not on your path.
If you try to force things to happen, your trying to tell a Greater Power what to do rather than listen to guidance. However, when you commit to saying that someone is not on your path, you can’t harbor anger or ill feelings because resisting them keeps them on your path.
When we don’t listen to our intuition, we are not listening to our Spirit. Do you listen to the voice or try to force something to happen? Where in your life are you trying to force things to happen right now?
When you argue with them, you are putting them back on your path, and they are blocking you from the next great thing. Spirit is always leading you to wonderful new opportunities. Listen and let go of the ones that aren’t on your path. Trust that the next best thing is on its way.
#howtodealwithsomeonewhotreatsyoubadly
#hesjustnotthatintoyou
#trustyourinnerknowing
#trustyourintuitionaboutaperson
#trustyourintuitioninrelationships
#justnotonyourpath
In this episode, Podcast Host Christopher J. Miller shares his experience with Deepak Chopra's Law of Pure Potentiality and the Gap. Chris urges listeners to stretch the moment of empty space before making the next decision on their canvas or in their personal lives.
As an artist, don’t rush to the end and don’t repeat past successes. We are here to be original creators. It’s about the journey, not the destination. Discover new aspects of your Creative DNA by not filling space too quickly. Set your intention, make space, and let Spirit bring you countless possibilities.
The longer we are able to stay in the space of the unknown, the more creative opportunities will arise. While it’s scary to be “in the Gap,” know that one key principle of nature will work for you. Nature abhors a vacuum, and Spirit will respond to your intention through divine intuition.
Make sure to follow this podcast by clicking on the three small circles in the podcast player. Visit http://spiritualartistoday.com to sign up for the online SEC Community Book club.
#field of infinite possibilities
#deepak chopra motivational speech
#creative field of possibilities
#its about the journey not the destination
#nature abhors a vacuum law of attraction
Podcast Host Christopher J. Miller kicks off the new year by asking listeners to claim their Superpowers and release their New Year’s Resolutions. What we focus on grows. When we concentrate on lack, we attract more lack. When we focus on abundance, we attract abundance. Our Superpower is what makes our unique expressions of Spirit!
What is special and unique to me? Many Superheroes hide behind another identity. Are you disguising your gifts because you’re afraid they are unacceptable? Chris challenges the listeners to let their Superpower show. Have you hidden your Superpower?
Realize that you have many different Superpowers. After this podcast, take 10 minutes, reflect and write out three Superpowers. Ask yourself, “Spirit in me, what is my Superpower, and how can I express it?”
Visit http://spiritualartistoday.com to sign up for the online SEC Community Book club.
Contemporary metal leaf oil artist Michelle Sakhai reveals her process of connecting to deep feelings and transforming them into love when she paints. She shares the importance of sitting with our emotions, even those parts of ourselves that we avoid, and by honoring, them, we transform them.
"It doesn't matter what your paint, whether figurative or abstract, but it matters that you are present and connecting to your higher self," she said. It's a form of meditation because you connect to a deeper part of yourself.
Michelle has used breathwork, prayer, incense, and other aspects of her native upbringing that represent home to align with her creative state. Everyone's tools will be unique to them. Michelle cautions that you should never be so attached to your tools that you can only work with them.
Be prepared to try new things. Being uncomfortable can be good; challenge yourself by choosing something outside your comfort zone.
Michelle explains that working with metallic leaf belies a childhood spent in the hills of Japan near a Buddhist temple. She was reacquainted with metallic leaf when visiting an Asian exhibit in San Francisco and loved the texture, brilliance, and way that metallic leaf catches the light.
Michelle uses metallic flakes loosely to capture light and flutter with passing movement. "You don't stop the leaf from falling off the painting," she said. "I put so much on that even if some falls off, there's plenty left." It's the changing and evolving aspect of the art that Michelle likes so much.
Michelle Sakhai is a contemporary artist who specializes in metal-leaf oil paintings. Her mixed heritage has shaped her as an artist. With both Persian and Japanese roots, her art derives influences from both cultures. Family trips to Japan initially exposed her to metal leaf and inspired her to become a pioneer in this medium.
Sakhai's paintings are exhibited in worldwide galleries, including Tokyo, Ibiza, Miami, and New York City. Her art remains in private and public collections, including the Montefiore Einstein Medical Center, The Fairmont Hotel in San Francisco, and Kamakura Park in Japan.
Sakhai's work has been exhibited in Universities, including Stamford, Michigan Medicine, The Academy of Art, Hofstra, and Mary Hardin-Baylor. She recently published her first book on Amazon titled 'Awakening,' a compilation of 200 paintings.
Follow her on Instagram @michellesakhaiart or visit her website www.michellesakhai.com for more information.
Good things require space. Look to nature as an example. Podcast Host CJ Miller asks listeners to take the step and let things go to create space for new possibilities to arrive. Sometimes we must be willing to release in faith before we see the next step. What is holding you back? Let it go this holiday season. Empty a closet or stop an activity taking space in your life. Or consider giving up an obligation that is no longer serving you. If you wait for new things to arrive before you let go, it won’t happen. You have to create space first.
#letgo
#emptyacloset
#newyearresolution
#howdoiattractpositivethings
Power Skills Specialist Lee Ann Piano shares the importance of writing a Vision Statement to achieve what you desire. As the New Year approaches, Lee Ann reviews four reasons to start with a clear vision for your life:
Lee Ann explains the importance of knowing your Why before writing a vision statement. What is your reason for being? According to Lee Ann, if you don’t direct your life, your life will direct you. Your life comes down to choice. Are you choosing to be a victim or an overcomer?
Once you are clear on your why statement, write out a vision that follows the rules of the 3Ps; make it personal, positive, and present tense. Our subconscious mind is programmed to receive information best in this format.
She recommends a neuro process known as autogenic conditioning. Autogenic condition relies on writing, seeing, and speaking the vision aloud. When you add feeling, it ensures that the message reaches your subconscious and accelerates the manifestation.
Lee Ann and Chris discuss a reinforcement technique. Use your vision statement to create the password for your computer or phone. Take the first letter of each word and make a password. Every time you enter your password, it reinforces your vision.
During the podcast, Lee Ann shares her journey through the trauma of breast cancer and 33 radiation treatments. As she received the treatments, Lee Ann would envision her life 5, 10, and 20 years after the diagnosis.
It is not big enough if your vision does not take you out of your comfort zone. Most importantly, you must be decisive about your idea. Absolute belief, tenacity, and action will hold the vision.
Lee Ann reminds the listener not to limit themselves. Don’t settle. And don’t try to figure out how it will happen; believe that it will happen.
In conclusion, Lee Anne shares five daily reflection questions to confirm that you are growing and course correct with your vision.
Lee Ann Piano is an author, speaker, and sales & leadership coach who has been fine-tuning the performance of professionals nationally and internationally for over 20 years. She has equipped thousands of individuals with forward-thinking, real-world tools that accelerate influence and impact change.
Lee Ann is a master facilitator and skilled developer of people. Her knowledge and expertise as a John Maxwell certified trainer and coach, coupled with her award-winning sales success in the telecom, software, and real estate industries, enable her to create new, innovative programs that speak directly to the needs of today’s empowered professionals.
For more information, visit https://leeannpiano.com.
Michaela Haas, Ph.D., an award-winning reporter and author of three non-fiction books, wrote her most recent book looking for answers to a chronic health issue she experienced.
Two psychologists, Richard G. Tedeschi, Ph.D., and Lawrence Calhoun, Ph.D., coined the term "post-traumatic growth" from their work with survivors. Michaela wondered how other people navigate through trauma, illness, and death.
In "Bouncing Forward: The Art and Science of Cultivating Resilience," Michaela interviews iconic "mavens of post-traumatic growth," including Writer and Civil Rights Activist Mia Angelou, ex-POW Brigadier General Rhonda Cornum, famed jazz guitarist and Holocaust survivor Coco Schumann, Buddhist Teacher Roshi Bernie Glassman, and many more.
Michaela gravitated toward Mia Angelou's definition of resilience. As opposed to bouncing forward, resilience explains that we can never bounce back; we will never be the same after that loss, but we can forge a path ahead, and it's not something that happens immediately.
She discovered a change in five different areas of their lives:
Michaela emphasizes that one of the essential components of resilience is joining like community and sharing your experience. "No one can do it on their own," she said. "Finding support is the most crucial step." She now defines herself as a solutions journalist, seeking stories of effective, reproducible solutions to society's most pressing issues.
Michaela is a contributing editor for David Byrne's Reasons to be Cheerful and has been writing for the New York Times, AlJazeera, Rotary International, the Huffington Post, CBS, and numerous other media. Awards include the Professional Excellence Award 2022-2023 from the Foreign Press Correspondents Association & Club (AFPC-USA), Winner ASJA Health Writing 2022, First Place Environmental Reporting LAPress Club 2020, a.o. Find her at www.MichaelaHaas.com
#solutionsjournalism
Podcast host CJMiller asks listeners to be willing to examine their beliefs each day. When we learn to "be the watcher" of our beliefs, we begin to actively participate in creating our lives. Are your current beliefs moving you forward, or are they holding you back? There is no right or wrong, but there is a "right for you."
Take extra care this week to watch your thoughts and ask Byron Katie's question, "Is this true?" to become a creative co-creator.
For more information, visit https://spiritualartisttoday.com
#byronkatie #beliefs #bethewatcher
Yoga teacher Lisa Coyle returns to The Spiritual Artist podcast to discuss the destructive cycle of stress and anxiety on the body. Her deeply informative podcast explains how the sympathetic and parasympathetic systems work and the importance of restorative practices in your daily routine. According to Lisa, our parasympathetic system supports us; the more we let go, the more we are supported.
Lisa practices yin yoga and yogic sleep to counter the adverse effects of chronic fight or flight on the body. Yogic sleep is a restorative guided meditation where your body and mind sleep while your consciousness remains awake. When in yogic sleep, the body heals, repairs, and detoxifies. According to Lisa, “We are nothing more and nothing less than part of universal consciousness. My consciousness is still alert, but my mind is quiet during this sleep.”
Chris and Lisa discuss the rampage of autoimmune issues in society today based on poor digestion. Poor digestion, air quality, and stress out picture as autoimmune issues, and there is a direct gut/brain connection. A chronic deluge of stress hormones weakens the digestive system. Chris asks the listener to mindfully notice how much time they spend in a stressful state during the following week.
Lisa closes the episode by sharing her technique for deep diaphragmatic breathing to quiet anxiety and stress whenever it occurs.
Lisa Coyle, RYT, HHC, AYS, is a Para Yoga Nidra Certified Teacher, a Yoga 4 Cancer Certified Teacher, a Yoga and Meditation Instructor, a Holistic Health Coach, and an Ayurvedic Lifestyle Consultant. For more information on her coaching, visit www.lisacoyleyoga.com. Her Yin Yoga Yogic Sleep class is available via www.thematyogastudio.com on Zoom.
Transformational coach and inspirational leader Cynthia James introduces her new book, "Does My Voice Matter?" Cynthia explains that the term "voice" is used as a metaphor to define the aspect of being more fully yourself. She encourages the listener to be more fully who they are, whether an author, painter, or writer, and let themselves be seen in the world.
She asks us to take action when we hear that inner calling and claim our unique voice. She believes we deprive people of our gifts when we hold back from our whole self.
The past doesn't define us, and we get to choose how we want to respond and show up in the world at any moment. She reminds the listener that no matter how we show up, somebody won't like it.
When we learn to listen and ask heartfelt questions, it opens space for both people.
Each chapter starts with a chronological timeline of world events by decade, followed by Cynthia's own experiences during that same time period.
Cynthia emphasizes the importance of coming from the heart when creating. She challenges the listener to work from the heart and let their authenticity come through.
At the end of the interview, she encourages readers to do the exercises at the end of each chapter and let the process work for them.
Cynthia excels as an International speaker, coach, singer, and multiple award-winning author of What Will Set You Free and Revealing Your Extraordinary Essence and #1 Amazon Bestseller for I Choose Me: The Art of Being a Phenomenally Successful Woman at Home and Work. For more information, visit http://cynthiajames.net.
Podcast host Chris Miller reviews the best gift ever given to him; when his sister affirmed that he "bounces" back from bad experiences. He accepted this belief at a very young age and has declared it his own throughout his life. He encourages the listener to pay attention to their thoughts, affirm the good ones and pivot the negative ones into positive ones. The episode concludes with a positive spiritual declaration.
#beliefssystem #belief #spiritualdeclaration
Podcast host, Christopher J. Miller shares his insecurities when viewing the work of a talented artist. When he feels jealousy or envy, he uses the emotional experience to remind him of his own unique value. We succeed when we fully embrace our individual creative DNA with 100% authenticity. If you're feeling jealous, consider that you're not fully expressing yourself.
Chris announces an upcoming podcast interview with Cynthia James to discuss her new book, “Does My Voice Matter?”
For more information, visit https//spiritualartisttoday.com.
Seeking clarity for life? In the episode, Chris continues his conversation about “being in the hallway” or being in that in-between place of indecision caused by a loss of job, change of relationship, health challenge, or other life experience.
Chris explores Ellen Debenport’s book, “Hell in the Hallway, Light at the Door,” and notes her definition that “prayer is focused thought that moves energy.” When we know that spirit is always speaking to us, we can set a clear intention and pray with the intent to “reveal what needs to be revealed and heal what needs to be healed.”
Chris reviews some of Ellen’s guidance tips on being in the hallway, including not skipping the grieving, expecting delays, accepting where you are, taking responsibility, being willing to forgive and seeing the situation or person differently, and asking others to hold the space for you.
Ask yourself, what is in this situation for me? Reveal what needs to be revealed. For more information, visit https//spiritualartistoday.com
Business Coach and Author Susie deVille believes that the process of creating is fueled by five essential practices that assist entrepreneurs and leaders in reclaiming their power and inspiration. She shares how many business owners gravitate toward analytical "left-brain" actions and lose access to their most potent tools: intuition, imagination, and ideation.
Susie shares her process known as the 5Ms™: meditation, morning pages, movement, moments of inspired learning, and making something. The 5Ms™ are powerful ways to interrupt your pattern of thoughts and behaviors. Susie encourages listeners to "get in the balcony of your perspective" and completely shift their lives and businesses.
Podcast host Christopher Miller shares his passion for Richard Nelson Bolles' book, What Color is Your Parachute? and one of its exercises that focus on writing down past achievements. Susie calls the process "Play Histories" and asks her clients to write stories and, upon completion, go back and circle the verbs. These verbs are powerful hints about your core essential self and help us remember what brings us alive.
Creativity is a state of connection and ground for an entrepreneur. In the moments of creating, we send down a taproot into our depths, allowing intuitive hits to rush to the surface. Once our intuition is ignited, we learn to trust ourselves, break through being stuck, and enjoy newfound clarity that powers our ability to reach our goals.
Susie cautions the listeners on the tendency to avoid their truth by engaging in habits that buffer us from experiencing our feelings, such as overworking, perfectionism, numbing food, and alcohol, and letting negative thoughts go unaddressed. Use her process to relax, recenter into your authentic vitality, and access your creativity back channels.
Susie deVille is a speaker, author, and Founder & CEO of the Innovation & Creativity Institute, a coaching firm connecting entrepreneurs and business leaders to their innate capabilities, guiding them to lead from a place of creative confidence. Susie is on a mission to show entrepreneurs and creators the power of trusting themselves and how to work lighter while making higher profits. Her book, BUOYANT: The Entrepreneur's Guide to Becoming Wildly Successful, Creative, and Free, is available wherever books are sold. For more information, visit InnovationandCreativityInstitute.com.
What is your Spiritual Practice? Podcast host, Christopher Miller shares the importance of spiritual practices and the many ways to incorporate them into your routine. Spiritual techniques include:
Chris introduces Susie deVille’s book, “Bouyant,” and announces an upcoming interview with the author, who will present her 5M’s, another form of a spiritual practice. He emphasizes that we can’t control our environment or the people around us, but we can control our thoughts by focusing on a feeling.
Take the first 60-minutes of your day and reserve it for Spiritual Practice. Pivot and get back to Spirit.
For more information on Chris and his spiritual online coaching, visit https//spiritualartisttoday.com.
Podcast Host Christopher J. Miller shares the metaphor of being in the hallway. Being in the hallway symbolizes the times in our life when we may be overwhelmed, exhausted, or simply not sure what we want to do next.
Chris reminds the listener to give themselves permission to stop and be in the hallway because sometimes inspired action takes time. Accept the hallway, ground yourself and let yourself be.
Chris shares an exercise from Lama Surya Das’s book, “Letting Go of the Person You Used to Be: Lessons on Change, Loss and Spiritual Transformation.” In this book, Das explains how to choose a personal mindfulness bell. Learn to practice being mindful by selecting a sound, thing, or word you often hear and using that experience to trigger a mindful moment. For example: the siren from an ambulance or fire truck is the mindfulness bell that Chris has selected.
One form of mindfulness is getting quiet, going within, and stopping our thoughts. Sending out love is another form, according to Chris.
Exercises: This week, let yourself be in the hallway and pick a personal mindfulness bell.
For more information on Chris or to schedule a personal coaching session, visit https//spiritualartisttoday.com.
#practicepresenceofgod #lamasuradas #mindfulnesspracticeforbeginners
United Kingdom mixed media abstract painter, coach, and mystic Irene Purcell shares the importance of vulnerability and connectivity in the creative process. After completing a deep dive into Nicholas Wilton of Art2Life's CVP course and Louise Fletcher's "Find Your Joy" course in 2019, Irene realized she was ready to take a deep dive into exploring her theme 'Everything is Connected.'
The podcast begins with a quick mention of the passing of Queen Elizabeth. Irene shares her thoughts on England's national mourning.
She talks a little about the practice of sharing feelings and thoughts in journaling. There are many therapeutic benefits of journaling, and aspects of the process are demonstrated in Julia Cameron's process of morning pages.
Identifying as a mystic, Irene understands that mystics are those who experience a personal revelation from God that reveals the truth that the whole universe has a power behind it, and we are all loved and adored. At the age of 30, Irene underwent a life-changing experience, and one thing she subsequently realized was that our resistance to vulnerability causes separation from others.
For 15 years, from age 31 onwards, Irene was part of an evangelical Christian church and eventually realized through a vision that doing the business of church was keeping her from her relationship with Jesus and from more fully walking in his way. She has expanded her spiritual landscape and explains that becoming more fully human is an ongoing process.
"What do I have to offer? Who I am. That is it. That's all I have got," said Irene. "My vulnerability is my safest place. There is nothing to live up to and nothing to prove. I can just be."
For more information about Irene, you can find her on Facebook under "Irene Purcell Art" and Instagram @irenepurcellart. Her website is https://www.irenepurcellart.com Irene currently assists Louise Fletcher with her online art program, https://www.louisefletcherart.com
Podcast Host Christopher Miller and Author Wilene Dunn share the lesson of letting go. When we accept the current situation, we open a portal for new things to arrive. Sometimes the problem has nothing to do with you; it’s just not working.
Writer and speaker Wilene Dunn shared the concept for her new book, “If a Bee Were Like Me.” Don’t blame yourself, others, or the environment; take radical responsibility for your life. If we stay in resentment or the blame game, we don’t allow Spirit to provide solutions.
When you find yourself protesting, you’re not allowing what is. We move forward by allowing ourselves to act on our feelings.
After listening to this self-help podcast, take a few moments to center yourself, get quiet and identify something in your life that you can released. For more information on spiritual coaching or the podcast, visit https://www.spiritualartisttoday.com.
Are you pushing too hard? Or are you not focused enough?
Podcast Host Christopher Miller explains Chapter 14, “The Rule of Medium,” from his book “The Spiritual Artist.” Achieve The Rule of Medium by practicing presence in your studio. Look for the flow in everyday life and practice The Rule of Medium when driving or walking down the street. When we push too hard, we meet opposition. When we’re not focused enough, we also discover resistance. Take this practice one step further by recognizing the Rule of Oneness. Let someone go ahead of you and feel your oneness with everyone else. When we are in Medium, creativity flows through us.
For more information, visit www.spiritualartisttoday.com
Texas-based photographer and multi-media artist Kris Hundt shares her Peter Pan approach to creativity in this delightful interview. She consciously maintains a state of play where she doesn't judge her subjects and shares herself in a place of joy.
According to Kris, it's by letting ourselves become vulnerable and opening a space for whatever it is that we enter the realm of creative play. She has learned to see her photography clients and students without judgment and let them be who they are. She approaches each portrait as a collaboration with her subject, drawing inspiration from the personal connections she forges during the shoot.
As a teacher, she encourages people to play. People get caught up in their heads instead of letting it flow through their hearts.
A lifelong traveler of exotic locales like Egypt, Israel, Guatemala, the UK, Ireland, Italy, Peru, and the Andes Mountains in Ecuador, Kris shares her story of the secret of a smile and a thank you when traveling alone. Gratitude opens many doors.
Along with photography, Kris has been expanding her creativity in other fields such as mosaics, paper arts, mono printing, and knitting. The list goes on and on.
She shares her "shooting from the hip" project with the listener. Take your phone, find something, and photograph it every day for 30 days. Learn to play with your filters and notice the different ways of viewing the same thing.
Practice the art of play by letting yourself have fun, release your desire for perfection, and be present with what is—learning to let it flow and being okay with what happens.
For more information on Kris Hundt, visit https://www.krishundt.com.
Discover new artist tools on how to spiritually grow. One of the earliest lessons we learn is about the importance of tools. You're more than halfway there if you use the right tools for the job. But using the wrong tools or relying too much on your devices can hold back your creativity.
In this artist chat, CJ challenges you to let go of a tool and try a new one. Experiment with your suite of tools and expand your creative boundaries.
You must have the right tool for the right job, but it's your spiritual responsibility to be aware of the tools that you're using.
On a spiritual level, consider the tools and habits you learned as a child from your parent, family, peers, and culture. Are they serving you? What practice can you release to make room for a new beginning?
You are not your tools. But you do get to pick the tools that you use!
For more information or virtual coaching, visit http://spiritualartisttoday.com.
As an Art Therapist, Creativity Coach, and Couture Embroiderer living in Australia, Crystal Gaye teaches her students to surrender to their internal guidance system and step outside their comfort zone. Crystal shares the importance of going within before entering the studio and asking, “What would I like to express through me today?”
When using art as a spiritual practice, a conscious connection to your higher power is your number one priority. Crystal explains that surrendering to this higher power keeps her work on the “growing edge.” While she continues to make progress, she’s not quite yet living it fully 100%. Often, she said, we are so busy doing that we cannot hear our inner voice.
Crystal shares her process of progressive painting. Progressive painting is when you start an image with only one task, adding marks and colors each day for 30 days. There is no goal to sell the finished project. “Each step informs the next,” said Crystal. “It’s a transformative process to arrive at the solution you seek.”
Conversation references “The Body Never Lies” by Alice Miller and “Daring Greatly” by Brene Brown. According to Crystal, when we surrender to our uniqueness and practice vulnerability, we realize our unique expression is enough.
Crystal Gaye is an artisan specializing in French Couture Embroidery, an Art Therapist & Creativity Coach. Crystal is passionate about inspiring creativity in others and sharing her skills and knowledge with students worldwide. You can study with Crystal via Zoom or her online courses. For more information, visit https://www.crystalgaye.com.au
When we practice seeing the abundance around us, it creates an abundance mindset. Spiritual Artist Podcaster Christopher Miller explains how mastering abundance is as simple as noticing the abundance you already have. Using the Law of Attraction and a little bit of patience, we can create mountains of abundance in our lives. Create abundance. Develop abundance. Be abundance. For more information, visit www.spiritualartisttoday.com
Entrepreneur, author, and innovator Wilene Dunn returns to The Spiritual Artist Podcast to share her trademarked Power Statement process. Power statements are more than positive affirmations but a way to impress the subconscious and create anything you desire.
The conversation starts by emphasizing the importance of belief in manifesting your desires. When we align ourselves with new thoughts, we create possibilities. And according to Wilene, “We live in the impossible.” A well-crafted Power Statement helps us believe differently, and our chosen words create our reality.
She explains that focusing on our condition (situation) only makes more of that situation. We are to declare and focus on what we desire. We don’t have to worry about the “how,” for there is a creator beyond us that can support whatever we claim.
Suppose you’re going to believe in the impossible, then why not believe in the most extraordinary impossible possible. According to Abraham Hicks, “You can create a castle as much as a button.”
Steps include visualizing precisely the thing you want and the feeling of completing it, creating a mental picture, writing a statement that emphasizes that feeling of fulfillment, and much more. Always remember to end your Power Statement with gratitude.
Be sure to listen to Wilene’s earlier podcast in Season 1, Episode 9, titled “The Power Behind Words.” The words you choose define your reality.
Download the Power Statement worksheet by visiting www.spiritualartisttoday.com. The link is on the home page and included in Chris’ bio. For more information or Power Statement coaching with Wilene, visit www.wilenedunn.com.
Writer and Podcast Host CJMiller explain two terms used throughout his book, “The Spiritual Artist.” The conversation focuses on Creative DNA and the Intelligence of Being.
First, he explains the importance of not letting the word God get in the way of your relationship with this power. He asks us to look for the spiritual essence of this power rather than a specific name and choose the best name for you.
Chris explains a term coined by Twyla Tharp, Creative DNA. How every one of us has a unique pattern behind our creativity, which out pictures in the creative discipline we gravitate to, the tool we use, and our artistic preferences.
Chris asks Spiritual Artists to be mindful of their Creative DNA and recognize who they are. He cautions them against imitating our creatives, for it is a crime against your Intelligence of Being.
When we follow the Intelligence of Being that we are born with, we find a clear path unfolds. Once we recognize who we are, we can consciously choose to change elements that no longer excite us.
We already have the recipe for success within ourselves. Our Intelligence of Being is always speaking to us if we only learn to listen.
He encourages listeners to visit “The Spiritual Artist Podcast” YouTube channel and listen to his Guided Intentional Meditation to Awaken Your Creativity.
A unique storytelling episode by CJ Miller revisits Chapter 3 of his book “The Spiritual Artist.” He reminds us to practice moments of awe throughout the day by being present to the world’s beauty around us. When we align with the world around us, we open ourselves to Spirit’s message.
Chris shares one listener’s story who clarified the practice by seeing God in everything and everyone. She experienced moments of God.
The conversation includes the importance of surrendering, but not necessarily excepting, our present life situation. It is at that point of surrender that we receive guidance.
Chris recommends Season 1 Episode 12, where he interviews singer/songwriter Gary Lynn Floyd and revisits Gary’s song, “God in Everyone.”
Visit www.spiritualartisttoday.com or purchase “The Spiritual Artist” on Amazon for more information.
Mixed Media Artist and owner of the Art Love Gallery in Provincetown, Massachusettes, Jackie Fuchs, shares how to “lean into” your pain and heal yourself through the use of stories. She encourages artists to reflect on the story they are telling themselves about their art by asking these questions. Why do I do what I do? How do I do it? And what does success mean to me?
She reminds the listener to embrace their feelings, even if they’re painful, and seek out tools that heal themselves. Tools include positive self-talk, meditation, choosing emotions, and reflecting on the story you tell others. She asks listeners to avoid using the term struggling artist. “If you’re painting, what is the struggle?” she asks. Words are part of your story.
Jackie reminds artists to invest in their success by participating in art fairs and workshops and surrounding themselves with a support group. As a gallery owner, she also encourages artists to find their unique voice and ensure that their portfolio displays that voice consistently.
Conversation references “The Five Love Languages” by Gary Chapman and “True Love” by Thich Nhat Hanh.
Jackie Fuchs is a mixed media artist and gallery owner and currently resides between the Hamptons and Provincetown, Massachusetts. She’s owned six different hair salons while teaching art and clay classes to children and adults. Jackie has also served as a motivational speaker at art fairs and shows. For more information, visit www.GalleryArtLove.com or follow her on Instagram at @ArtLoveGallery_studiojackie
For more information on the importance of language, listen to Season 1, Episode 9: Writer and Wordsmith Wilene Dunn Demonstrates the Power Behind Words.
Terry Rickman is a body and gender-affirming portrait photographer who creates a safe, nurturing space for LGBTQ, Trans, and Non-Binary people to get personal portraits. The conversation includes a deep dive into body image and acceptance of our true identity.
Terry's process involves helping clients appreciate their bodies and present themselves authentically. He describes how we absorb language from the greater society that is often negative or self-deprecating, and we use those words when describing ourselves. While you may find specific features of your body that you aren't happy with, you can still appreciate them, according to Terry.
We are whole individuals with multiple features that create unique, valuable spiritual humans. We can't love our bodies all the time, but when we have those unloving moments, find one good thing about ourselves and focus on it.
The discussion examines personal pronouns and how our society has built a world based on gender roles. Terry encourages the listen to release their baggage on limiting beliefs about appropriate clothing and accessories based on stereotypical gender assignments.
For those learning to review their true selves, Terry emphasizes the importance of surrounding yourself with like-minded people to move into a space of being more fully yourself. Portrait photography is one way to affirm and share your individual story.
For more information, visit www.www.ProudFamilyPortraits.com and follow Terry on Instagram @terrywrickman.
As a bipolar artist in Lewisville, Texas, resident Charles McDowell merges medication and art therapy through his mastermind group, MyPolarLife. Charles explains that his artwork is inspired by the complexity of the human mind and the void between mental illness and mental clarity.
Podcast host Christopher Miller and Charles discuss what it means to be in a flow where you give up expectations and keep yourself “straight.” Art inspires people, and Charles believes that the artist will be successful if one person is encouraged.
Charles and his group choose their languaging carefully, always remembering the positive gift in their mental situation. Everyone’s experience of mental health is different. Learning to embrace your current mental situation is a central theme of his recent work. As spiritual artists, we bring “all of ourselves” to our art.
According to Charles, mental illness is overthinking. He recommends “pouring yourself into your talent” and focusing on others are two ways to get out of yourself and deal with mental challenges.
In addition to MyPolarLife, Charles strives to destigmatize the conversation around mental health by participating as an active member of the Society of Depressed Artists (SODA), located in Dallas, Texas. He also participates in events that provide a portion of his sales to the non-profit, Foundation 45, a health awareness group that offers services in Dallas-Ft. Worth. You can see Charles and his work at the Coral Reef Coffee Company in Lewisville, Texas, on April 7 from 5:30 to 8 p.m. A portion
Charles’ mixed-media paintings can be seen on Instagram @polar seeker. For more information on Foundation 45, visit foundation45.org. Listeners can find The Society of Depressed Artists on Facebook: soda_dallas.
Podcast Host Chris Miller does a deep dive into Alex Cook’s new book, “You Are Loved: Spiritual & Creative Adventures,” and discusses key concepts with the author.
In his authentic memoir, Cook shares his battle with depression, his years of Prison Ministry service, and his love of God through personal stories of humor, poignancy, and faith. He emphasizes the importance of presence and listening while creating. “When you are being present, you bring with you all the tools that you have amassed,” according to Cook.
Alex shares the importance of his deep connection to God in his work and process. The artist has learned to move beyond his emotions and into his connection with God as his source of creativity. He listens to Spirit, chooses which feelings are more compelling, and releases the others. Discussion includes the need to be fluid while working and consciously overcome the willful desire to control. According to Cook, “Prayer works best when I’m not willful, but I’m willing to go with the Spirit.”
Since 1997 Alex Cook has created over 200 murals in 20 states and four countries. Alex’s work focuses on community and spiritual themes expressed through nature imagery and storytelling. One of Cook’s current endeavors, the YOU ARE LOVED mural project, makes murals whose image is simply the words “YOU ARE LOVED.” His YOU ARE LOVED mural project emphasizes that “People feel safe when they know that they are loved and valued.”
To date, there are 80 YOU ARE LOVED murals in 13 states and two countries. They are in schools, homeless shelters, prisons, worship communities, and more.
The book is available at www.stonebalancer.com/you-are-loved-memoir and on Amazon.
For more information, visit www.stonebalancer.com and www.youarelovedmurals.com.
Intuitive Reiki Master, Mindset Coach, Writer, and Blogger Marlene Caraballo defines reiki and explains how the technique can release emotional blocks limiting your spiritual growth.
Marlene uses a process of intuition and her external energy body to assist her clients by releasing emotions. According to Marlene, we need to let our emotions flow through us as though they were passing clouds, feel them thoroughly and then let them go. She believes that all creation contains energy and uses this universal connection to assist her clients through in-person and long-distance sessions.
Conversation reviews Mark Gober’s book and podcast, “An End to Upside Down Thinking,” in which he dispels the myth that the brain produces consciousness.
Marlene emphasizes the power of prayer, good intention, and the ripple effect of kindness. According to Marlene, emotion connects us to humanity and what we are here to experience. When emotions are not fully experienced, they are held in the body.
Marlene explains that we don’t have control over our emotions, but we control how we feel about them and she shares some simple energy shifting exercises; affirmations, journaling, experiencing nature/animals, physical movement, and “curating” data/media input in your life. Please pay attention to the energy around you and curate it.
For more information on reiki and mindset coaching with Marlene, visit www.cheers2chapter2.com and download her free positive affirmations. Plus, you can follow Marlene on Instagram @reikihealingpowers and Chris @thespiritualartistpodcast.
Fine Artist John Domont discusses the challenges of visually representing the spiritual and the physical world in his works of art. “I am working to discover a language based on internal and external experiences and circumstances that reveal our commonalities,” said John.
John’s body of work includes photography, painting, and writing. His compositions represent the human experience integrating the sensed with the known through the realms of color, form, composition, and light.
John puts aside his emotional ego to become a blank slate onto which he can enter the state of receiving from the “all that is.” “The joy comes from expressing or being in dialogue with the silent unknown in the living moment,” said John. Chris and John share notes on the challenge between balancing masculine technical skills with feminine intuitiveness in their work.
John cites William Turner’s process, whose work is currently on display in the “Turner’s Modern World” exhibit at the Kimbell Art Museum in Fort Worth, as a source of inspiration.
Whether John’s process is mystical or sensualist, he emphasizes the importance of seeing, hearing, feeling, and experiencing life in a state of unification. According to the artist, his art expresses, who we are, where we are, and what we share in common.
“You are an essence of creation that needs to be fulfilled,” said Domont. For more information or to see his work, visit www.domontstudio.com.
Meisner Technique Teacher Terry Martin returns to The Spiritual Artist Podcast to discuss emotions and how we can use them to drive the creative process. He advises not to avoid them or stop them but to express them completely without judgment. Emotions are not static; they are a "movement" toward expression.
In honor of Stephen Sondheim's recent passing, Terry shares Sondheim's creative advice in lyrics from "Into the Woods" and "Sunday in the Park with George" while explaining the power behind emotions. The conversation includes the importance of embracing your emotions and learning to be who you are in every single moment. Discover the importance of following your impulses, seeing new creative opportunities, and feeling the excitement of discovering new levels in your work.
Whether you're an actor, painter, ceramicist, or musician, learn to stand in your emotional experience and see where it takes you. According to Sondheim, "Stop worrying where you're going. Move on. If you can know where you're going, you've gone. Just keep moving on."
For coaching information with Terry Martin, or to sign up for a class, visit https://www.facebook.com/terry.martin
Texas muralist and painter Andrea Holmes infuses her work with environmental passion and a love of painting. Andrea is known as the bird lady for her series of bird paintings and her daily creation challenge, "Birdtober," held during October. Her social media following has expanded globally, where she inspires artists to create bird-themed art daily for one month. She recently directed her efforts to the National Audubon Lights Out campaign to educate people on light pollution and its effect on bird species. She explores the unattainable and elusive aspect of birds as reasons for her attraction to the subject matter.
Andrea and Chris share their fluid definition of what it means to be an artist. Conversation highlights include understanding imposter syndrome and the need to claim the artist within.
Andrea is currently writing a book with fellow artist Beth Fields about the artist's journey and the importance of mentorship. The book explores the power of mentorship through collaboration, not competition, in the voices of two very different artists. According to Andrea, part of the artist's journey is learning from other people, assimilating their technique, and making it yours.
In conclusion, Andrea shares art show booth tips and tricks with the listeners, including the importance of maintaining a positive attitude during the show, sending naysayers on their way, and providing a variety of price points in the booth. Andrea emphasizes that artists shouldn't be possessive of their tools because their power remains in their authenticity. Our unique creative DNA is our secret sauce.
For more information on Andrea, visit https://www.aholmesartstudio.com/.
Listen to this heart-warming story about Chris' recent trip to Santa Fe. After taking several weeks off from producing "The Spiritual Artist Podcast," host Christopher Miller shares his harrowing adventure through the hills of Santa Fe to visit a sick friend. Chris initially met artist Carolyn on his first journey to New Mexico and felt a deep desire to visit her during a time of need. A flat tire, an intermittent phone signal, and rocky terrain challenge him to understand the true meaning of control and Spiritual guidance. He is reminded to seek those moments of awe; look for beauty, release control and trust his Spiritual guidance.
For more information, consider purchasing a copy of "The Spiritual Artist" on Amazon or visiting http://www.spiritualartisttoday.com.
Join host Christopher Miller as he learns how Pamela Urbas and Andrew Duchovnay of The Indigo Sanctuary search for rock and stones to be used in their jewelry and spiritual art. Pam and Andy travel the country and overseas, seeking beautiful stones, crystals, or gemstones to be used in their designs. The couple shares the importance of spiritual grounding before each expedition and the need to be open to nature's vibrations. According to Pam and Andy, rockhounding involves being in a state of focused play.
Later, Pam and Andy share several personal stories of spiritual animal guides leading them to the perfect stone and explain how to be open to the stone's vibration. They suggest holding a rock in the palm of your hand while asking these questions: how do I respond to its color and shape? how does it make me feel? They acknowledge that some energy is pleasant, and some unpleasant. Andy shares his belief that there is an energy in everything that flows through us and recognizes that we are all part of nature.
Through their business, The Indigo Sanctuary, they support people in their spiritual journeys by providing ethically sourced gemstones, jewelry, and spiritual art, as well as other meditation and yoga products. For more information, visit http://www.theindigosanctuary.com and use discount code SpiritualArtist10 to save 10% on their work.
Certified Clinical Hypnotist Valerie Grimes is the creator of hypnotictrip.com, virtual and real-life experiences that blend hiking, hypnosis, and nature to inspire powerful transformations.
Valerie explains how hiking creates a natural hypnotic state; the repetitive movement slows down the conscious mind so her clients can access their limiting subconscious beliefs. The conversation reveals the benefits of journaling, painting, walking, or any repetitive household chore to quiet the mind. She also uses visual, auditory, and kinesthetic cues while performing walking meditations to reach her patients.
Valerie reassures that hypnosis is only suggestive therapy; the client always remains in control during the process while accessing subconscious beliefs that may be sabotaging their lives. Podcast host, Christopher Miller, revisits the concept of a “Dark Night of the Soul.” This spiritual crisis occurs in someone’s life in which they are challenged to make dramatic changes in their life. Valerie and Chris refer to Gary Chapman’s book “The 5 Love Languages” and Pena Chodron’s book “When Things Fall Apart: Heart Advice for Difficult Times.”
Valerie shares her journey to realizing that our beliefs are merely patterns that can be revisited and altered to serve our goals. Podcast concludes by reviewing the many different symbolic ways we interpret our life events and the ability to reassign meaning to those symbols.
For more information on Valerie’s services, visitwww.hypnotictrip.com or www.theflowcenter.com.
Lucid Dream Artist David Green details his process for creating art while dreaming. Dave uses Wake-Induced Lucid Dreaming to maintain awareness as he falls asleep. While asleep, he separates from his body and draws in a dream studio. Upon waking, he immediately recreates the drawing by memory. Conversation references Daniel Love’s book, “Are You Dreaming: Exploring Lucid Dreams: A Comprehensive Guide.” And explains the difference between a Dream-Induced Lucid Dream and a Wake-Induced Lucid Dream, how to prime the situation, several induction methods, and taking control of the dream.
Host Christopher Miller and Dave Green share their ideas on expectation, dream patterns and symbology, and the importance of facing your emotions during a dream. References are made to Andrew Holecek’s book “Dream Yoga” and David Eagleman’s book on brain neuroplasticity, “Livewired: The Inside Story of the Ever-Changing Brain.”
How does our subconscious affect our dreams? Can our nighttime visions predict the future? What is behind the power of dreams? Listen and learn.
For more information on Dave Green, visit his website https://dave-green.co.uk/ and see his work on Instagram @davegreen5000.
Multimedia artist and Educator Leonor Alvim Brazao combines drawing and poetry to create a visual message about life, our experience through women, and the creative process. She explains how drawing was her original form of communication as a shy child and expanded into music and drawing. Her technique includes doodling marks or “monsters” with one flowing line while genuinely seeing the world around her. Her mentor advises to never stop doodling because these marks are unique to you and no one else.
Content includes the reciting of several poems, including The Line, #metoo, and Motherhood from the book titled, “Women – Illustrated Poetry.” The conversation includes a discussion of Leonor’s poem titled Marielle, which speaks of Marielle Franco, a Brazilian politician, sociologist, feminist, and human rights activist who was protesting police brutality at the time of her assassination.
Leonor attains a very organic look with her drawings by using graphite pencils and water soluble graphite. She softens the edges with multiple layers of ink with water.
According to Leonor, life is about the importance of letting go and starts by listening to yourself. The podcast ends with a reading of Enigmas from her book, “Flight,” and reveals the process of finding your voice. Purchase Leonor’s books on Amazon.com and visit her website at www.brazao.com
A mind is a tool that can be directed. Can we make it work better for us? Can our minds be managed? Educational Consultant Lisa Watford works with students to adapt their natural gifts and excel at tasks or tests. Her academic coaching skills have been honed by working with Learning Differenced students, including ADD, ADHD, and Dyslexia. Now, she uses those same tools to work with students of all abilities to accomplish their goals.
This podcast shares some tools for preparing your mind for studying and working. Lisa coins the phrase, “Meditation instead of medication.” Learn to take 5 minutes to ground yourself before any activity and prepare your mind for a state of receiving. She focuses on executive functioning skills that improve focus, memory retention, and body/brain harmony.
Your body is constantly communicating its needs. Are you listening? The conversation includes preparing your space, grounding yourself, syncing body and brain, using color to stimulate memory retention, and the Emotional Freedom Technique (tapping).
According to Lisa, everyone has their brand of brilliance, whether verbal, visual, or kinesthetic, and they need to take the time to understand how it works. To expedite your learning skills or to schedule an appointment with Lisa, visit www.lisawatford.com.
Cincinnati Prize-winning Violinist and Life and Artistry Coach for musicians Jennifer Roig-Francolí shares her “The Art of Freedom® Method” and its roots in The Alexander Technique. Jennifer uses her method to help musicians feel better and play better by overcoming physical and mindset hurdles getting in their way. The conversation includes Jennifer’s hands-off process to integrate the mind and body with non-doing. The human organism is a two-way system of mind and body. When we choose to think differently, we can change lifetime habits for greater physical ease and happiness. As humans, we can’t always trust our feelings due to faulty sensory appreciation. Still, by learning how to be consciously curious, we can begin to identify the root causes of blocked energy and creativity and effect positive change in our lives and artistry.
Access the Primal Alexander™ Awareness Etude called TheCyCle™ mentioned in this podcast by visiting: https://youtu.be/aUEKvfPAXS4
To learn more about Jennifer’s services, visit www.artoffreedom.me or join her free Facebook group for musicians: https://www.facebook.com/groups/J30DPC/
What are the gifts of creative expression? Can creativity help us navigate illness and grief? Artist and Certified Educator for Golden Artist Colors Melanie Brannan uses painting and writing to share stories of her journey with House Manager and Gallery Director Maryann Wegloski through nodular melanoma diagnosis. In this podcast, Melanie reveals her current solo show "A Celebration of Friendship" at the Eisemann Center for Performing Arts in Richardson, Texas. Each painting includes a descriptive story that explains the love, laughter, and lament experienced through Melanie’s and Maryann’s journey together. Conversation highlights include the importance of appreciating our relationships, investing in our friends, and the art of listening. There is a spiritual gift in every life experience if only we decide to be present to what is. The exhibit remains on display from March 3 through May 31, 2021. One hundred percent of the sales after expenses will be donated to AIM at Melanoma Foundation. For more information about Melanie and her current exhibition, visit www.melaniembrannan.com or purchase paintings at www.urbanartistmarket.com.
Previous guest and musician Robin Hackett returns to share her new book release, “The Creative You; a step-by-step guide to recovering that part in you that wants to express creatively. Robin introduces her Fairy God Muse and how she follows her intuition. She explains how many people, especially women, experience an artistic wound in their childhood. As a result, a rowdy cast of characters, including Negative Nelly, take residence in their heads and hold them back from their creativity. The discussion reviews the importance of being in the action of allowing rather than focusing on the finished product and how “thinking disturbs the flow of creativity.” As an artist, we are in service to others and touching their lives. The podcast ends with Robin’s seven-step process; remember, release, reclaim, reconnect, receive, rejoice and repeat. For more information on Robin’s albums and books, visit www.robinhackettmusic.com.
New Mexico Fiber Artist Cheryl R. Janis explains her meditative preparation before weaving, her conscious choice of cruelty-free, ethical fibers, and the use of her intuitive and empathic faculties while weaving. How do we connect with Spirit during the creative process? Does our choice of material carry a consciousness ? As a highly-sensitive person (HSP), Cheryl shares her walk through her "Dark Night of the Soul," where she cleared past issues and revealed her connection to all that is. She emphasizes the importance of setting a firm intention before beginning work and listening to Spirit's subtle energies.
The conversation includes references to Eckhart Tolle's meditative practices and Elaine N. Aron's "The Highly Sensitive Person: How to Thrive When the World Overwhelms You."
Cheryl R. Janis is a fiber artist with a wellness design background. Cheryl specializes in high-texture modern weaves made with small-batch, organic, raw, and ethical fibers. For more information, visit www.theenchantedweave.com or www.urbanartistmarket.com. For assistance with HSP, visit Cheryl's energy healing website: www.neshamaenergyhealing.com.
Host Christopher J. Miller interviews spiritual songwriter Gary Lynn Floyd on his newest album and the presence of love when writing his music. The episode begins with a sample of the first song on Gary’s latest album,“Back to the Essence” based on the first days of COVID.
Gary shares his thoughts on accessing creativity with love consciousness during the moments of forced separation that we are all experiencing during the pandemic. What’s the difference between choosing alone time and being forced to be alone? Gary reflects on past relationships and the need to return to love for healing.
Conversation reviews the challenge of duality in spirituality, the use of infinite intelligence, and the power of your thoughts when manifesting. Gary reminds us to take personal responsibility for the world we have created in our lives and showing up in love.
Is God in everyone, as one of Gary’s song titles implies? According to Gary, that spark of divinity is in all of us to that extent that we are self-aware and can embody.
Chris shares his thoughts regarding Gary’s newly released song, “Nothing’s Alright,” and the ability to accept the current situation during the creative process and welcoming the final creative result as is.
Gary Lynn Floyd is currently the Artist in Residence at the Center for Spiritual Living Reno and has performed since 14. He has produced many albums including, BodySoul, My 88Keys vol 1 Unplugged, My 88Keys vol 2 Quarantined, and Floyd-Lula 2.
For more information, visit https://garylynnfloyd.com.
In this episode, Host Christopher J. Miller plays turn-about with recent guest and wordsmith Wilene Dunn. Wilene initiates a dialogue with Chris about his new book, The Spiritual Artist. Chris also shares his creative expression through the Urban Artist Market and the founding of The Spiritual Artist Podcast.
In addition to sharing his journey while writing the book, Chris explains how names separate us from our relationship to Greater Power and Spiritual Truths, and why he uses the practice of inserting a blank line within the book's copy to allow the reader to participate by using their name for this Greater Power.
What is that power that we connect with when creating? How can we practice revealing that consciousness within? In his book, Chris suggests a process to achieve this state. As the interviewer, Wilene invites him to highlight one of his favorite chapters, The Intelligence of Being, where he explains that everyone has a unique creative expression, whether they are conscious of its presence or not.
After Chris shares his Spiritual Life Coach training at A Center for Spiritual Living in Dallas, the interview closes. According to Chris, "Everyone is special and worthy in Spirit." For more information, visit www.spiritualartisttoday.com
Host, Christopher Miller shares Harold Rosenberg’s concept of Action Painting with Painter, Sumi-e Painter, and Collagist Randy Padorr-Black.
Padorr-Black details his understanding of the timeless state of flow, a portal between two zones, time-space and no time-space where intuition creeps into his creative work. He explains that when an artist creates in that space, they create a “portal piece.”
The conversation includes the importance of the meditative state in the creative process. Padorr-Black shares being inspired by Chogyam Trungpa’s book, “Meditation in Action,” and Zen Buddhism, when he was young. He explains how abstract expressionism and Sumi-e painting help him move through fear and unblock his mind.
For more information on Randy Padorr-Black, see his work at www.saatchiart.com/account/artworks/1171775.
Author and Business Entrepreneur Wilene Dunn details the importance of our everyday language. Are our words moving us toward our goals or further way? Host Christopher Miller interviews Wilene about the importance of word choice when speaking and manifesting.
Conversation includes highlights from Florence Scovel Shinn’s books “The Game of Life and How to Play it” and “Your Word is Your Wand.” According to Wilene, Shinn emphasizes that words should reveal a “flash of the fulfillment of the demand.”
Understanding what you want is key to your word selection. Wilene explains how each word has a specific energy and visual power. She demonstrates our ability to stand in peace during something as strenuous and stressful as the COVID-19 epidemic by our conscious choice of words.
Wilene Dunn is an entrepreneur, innovator and author focused on building creative businesses that foster and strengthen individuals through networking, coaching and program development. For more information on Wilene, visit http://www.phoneticsworld.com and http://www.wcdmarketing.com
Host Christopher Miller interviews Licensed Clinical Social Worker/Therapist, LCSW Peggy Roberts on the definition of Transpersonal Therapy. Discussion enlightens what it means to connect to a power greater than one's own and be in the state of a “Spiritual Artist.” Peggy details the difference between the creative process performed by ego as opposed to Spirit and reviews Maslow’s Hierarchy of Needs.
Conversation highlights the importance of ritual when engaging Spirit, creating a sacred space and solitude. Peggy presents different tools to employ that release your creative Spirit including music, dance, meditation, yoga, memory recall and even humming!
Peggy explores her use of color therapy as a healing mechanism and explains its roots in Steven Vasquez’ process of Emotional Transformation Therapy. Conversation ends with the importance of learning to “be present to oneself” and remembering the truth of your being.
Peggy provides therapy and coaching in issues of anxiety, coping skills, divorce, processing grief, life coaching, relationship and self esteem. She is available in person or online. For more information, call 817.988.3578.
Host Christopher Miller interviews North Texas jewelry designer and painter Dana Brock on the opportunities presented by perfectionism during the creative process. Dana details how she learned to embrace imperfection in her jewelry design and was surprised to discover customers seeking out those inconsistencies. Dana introduces the ancient Japanese tradition of Wabi-sabi; an aesthetic described as one of beauty that is "imperfect, impermanent, and incomplete.”
While pursuing imperfection requires vulnerability, the rewards are endless according to Dana. Conversation also includes discussion of Twyla Tharpe’s exploration of hardwired Creative DNA in every artist. Dana participates in the Urban Artist Market and the Millhouse Art-fest. Her work is always presented at the MillHouse ArtBlock in the Cotton Mill, where she keeps a studio under the name, “Dzyn by Dana.” For more information, visit https://www.dana-brock-studio.com and https://www.dzynbydana.com
Host Christopher Miller interviews landscape architect/teacher Michael Parkey, ASLA on the art of listening during the creative process. Michael introduces listening for the Genius Loci or “Guardian Spirit of a Place.” As artists, we’re asked to be still, be present and avoid the temptation to force a solution. Conversation details Michael’s learned process including years of practice, focused concentration and “dreaming with his eyes open” that helps him identify the emotional feeling of a project. He cautions to avoid formulaic work while letting the creative process unfold. Discussion also includes reference to Mark Nepo’s “Seven Thousand Ways to Listen,” and the learnable ability to visualize a project before it’s begun. Michael has taught courses on landscape design and native plans for Southern Methodist University, and frequently lectures on the same topics. His articles, designs, and illustrations have appeared in several books and periodicals, and he has frequently contributed to The Dallas Morning News. His designs have received awards from the City of Dallas and the American Society of Landscape Architects. For more information, visit http://www.michaelparkey.com/
Host Christopher Miller interviews writer, speaker, and spiritual coach Tracy Brown on breaking through limiting beliefs and writer’s block during the creative process. When we step “into” the creative process, we can choose a different behavioral response to develop new beliefs that are grounded in feeling. Tracy reviews 12-step programs and their focus on changing behavior to create new thoughts, feelings and beliefs. Discussion includes building a framework for creativity while learning to listen for inspired guidance in the process. Tracy Brown is the author of “Stained Glass Spirit: Becoming a Spiritual Community Where Oneness Does Not Require Sameness” and, “I Turn to Prayer” a collection of prayers written in a variety of formats. Many people know her as the moderator of the public Facebook group: What is Mine to Do, where group members focus on personal responsibility to break the cycle of race-based hatred and violence. For more information, visit https://reclaimjoy.com or https://stainedglassspirit.net
Host Christopher Miller interviews actor/director/teacher Terry Martin on practicing intentional presence during the creative process. Reveal your authentic point of view by turning off the critical editor in your head, withholding judgment and walking through the fear. Terry shares insights into the repetition exercise, the foundation of the Sanford Meisner Technique, discusses “Intention of Attention” and the importance of being in the moment when acting or doing any creative process. Discussion includes quotes from Anne Bogart’s “What’s the Story: Essays about Art, Theater and Storytelling” and the challenges of performing in “The Absolute Brightness of Leonard Pelkey” by James Lecesne. According to Terry, “Your unique point of view is your voice to the world.”
For more information, visit https://terrymartinact.com/
Host Christopher Miller interviews Dallas yoga teacher Lisa Coyle on the mind-body connection. She shares how the body carries the burdens held by the mind and the ways that we can release these stored emotions. Conversation highlights include using breath as a bridge between body and mind and what Eckhart Tolle means by his term Pain Body. Plus, discover how Yoga Nidra can shift your mind with the 61 Point Relaxation Practice that corrals the mind’s movement. According to Lisa, the cure is right next to the body and when we learn to quiet the mind we reveal the intrinsic power of healing. Practice with Lisa at The Mat Yoga Studio in Dallas, https://www.thematyogastudio.com/.
Host Christopher Miller interviews Dallas singer/songwriter Robin Hackett about the source of her creative inspiration. Robin introduces her song, "Love is what we're here for," and its message. She cites her recognition and connection with oneness as the driving force behind her lyrics and notes that people use different terms for this energy. Some call it God, Divine Intelligence, Source but they are all one according to Robin. She believes in receiving from this source rather than forcing a manufactured creativity. Episode includes the importance of showing up, original connection and gratitude in the creative process. For more information, visit http://robinhackettmusic.com.
Chris Miller is an artist and producer of the Urban Artist Market. Visit www.cjmillerart.com or www.urbanartistmarket.com for more information.
Host Christopher Miller interviews Dallas mixed-media artist Rebecca Collins on her process of working with and through fear when creating art. Rebecca shares her insights dealing with Stage 4 Cancer and a global Covid-19 pandemic. In addition to these external fears, Rebecca discusses showing up and the use of detachment while struggling with internal fears of failure. Collins details her use of meditative sketching while drawing healthy cancer cells and terms the process as a form of cellular mythology. Episode also reviews mindful mark making and the healing practice of art. For more information on Rebecca's art, http://rebeccacollins.com/. Chris Miller is an artist and producer of the Urban Artist Market. Visit www.cjmillerart.com or www.urbanartistmarket.com for more information.
En liten tjänst av I'm With Friends. Finns även på engelska.