Interesting that most people seem to see the inability to recognise risk as being somehow a positive feature - linked to bravery, faith or whatever - whereas I would see it as negative. The ability to recognise risk and react to it would seem to be one of the most important human attributes.
Jayne A. Harnett-Hargrove is a working artist, cross trained in the traditional arts whose output encompasses word-wrangling, illustration, bricolage, a quarterly zine entitled Meraki Issue, costume design for opera, immersive, and other theatrics. Jayne moves deftly through these traditional arts, creating narrative shards exploring memory, history, and myth. Her overriding drive to create is to experience the human condition with mindful compassion, frustration, and fear that we collectively experience. She has written, painted & designed on four continents, while lending her hands for mentoring, exhibiting art along the way, while emulating her heroes, Bouboulina, Hundertwasser, and Joan DeArc. She has lived in the shadows of the Rockies, in Joshua Tree desert, in iconic Florence, and on the Libyan shore of Crete — and continues this tradition for work and other pleasures as an important part of her inspiration and musing. She currently lives in the Blue Ridge Mountains near Asheville NC, but her heart always seems to be miles away. Learn more: harnetthargrove.com
That is the secret to stepping up in any situation, isn't it?
ReplyDeletefaith you mean?
ReplyDeletelove
yvette
Interesting that most people seem to see the inability to recognise risk as being somehow a positive feature - linked to bravery, faith or whatever - whereas I would see it as negative. The ability to recognise risk and react to it would seem to be one of the most important human attributes.
ReplyDeleteRisk.... fear.... whatever it is.... acknowledge it, face it head on and move forward.
ReplyDeleteah yes. Its brave when the risk is recognised
ReplyDelete