Wednesday, April 16, 2014

More Themes to Explore



To carry on a bit about themes. 

     Whenever I think of a good theme, I write it on my secret list of theme ideas – a good idea should never be lost!  About October of each year, I start to think about the next year’s theme.  I look at the list for suggestions, and by Thanksgiving, depending on my mood and current life interests, probably I have narrowed my thinking down to about 5 or so topics.  However, life can change quickly, so I don’t lock the final choice down until the last minute, like during Christmas week (or even New Year’s Eve!). 
     Simultaneously, in October, I start looking for next year’s journal books.  They need to be bound (not spiral or ring notebooks), a different color than the previous year, so that it is easy to locate visually on the shelf, and have enough pages to see me through the next year.  This last means more that a-page-a day, since I need extra room for sketches, drawings, quotations,  clippings, birthday cards, book lists, color samples, etc., as well as room for my customized pages (title page, theme description page, end-of-month summary/divider page, index at the back, pocket page(s), and possible tracking lists.  This can go beyond 400 pages, and few journal books contain that many, and if they do, they can be unwieldy to handle.  In such cases, my solution is to buy extra volumes to handle the “spill-over,” anywhere from 1-4 volumes total, based on the number of pages per volume.  If there are multiple volumes for a year (and there usually are), they will be designated by the year and the addition of A, B, C, D, as appropriate (ex:  “2009-A”).  Sometimes it’s nice to start the next volume when the seasons change, and if there are a few “blank pages” left behind and  not used, that is not all bad because there’s still room to add something which turns up later.
     The time between the purchases in October and December is used to customize the exterior as well as interior of the volumes, so that they become a clearly related set on the shelf.  On the outside, in addition to a different color, both the front cover and spine of the journals have the year, volume, and a short theme-phrase clearly written.
     It all comes together, at the latest, on New Year’s Eve.  That’s when I make the commitment on theme, add it to all the previously prepared journals (front, spine, and title page), and explain on the theme page inside what the theme is intended to cover for the up-coming year, knowing that there can be surprises to come.

Some Theme Ideas for Inspiration
“Backyard Voices”                               “Gate-Keepers”
“I Will Never … “                                “Point of Balance”
“Pocket Poems”                                   “Sign Language”
“Persistence of Vision”                           “On the Edge”
Every Day Well-Lived”                          “Bricolage”
“No Man is an Island”                          “Boomerang”
“Where Are They Now?”                     “Vision Keeper”
“Fear Not”                                           “Breathless”
“Reflections”                                         “Sum of the Parts”
“Believe”                                              “To Be & To Have”
“A company of … “                              “Carpe Diem”
“Forever Moments”                              “Patchworks”
“Transformations”                                 “Circle of … “
“Accidental Discoveries”                       “Heart’s Garden”
“Left-Overs”                                        “Story Boxes”
“White” (or any other color)                  “Trick of Light
“A Piece of String”                               “Living Trust”
“The Wisdom of … “                            “The Mind’s Eye”
“No Matter”                                         “Dangers & Risks”
“Sights Unseen”                                    “Lost & Found”

Some Words of Encouragement:
·        “A house without books is like a room without windows.”  [Horace Mann]
·        “’Who says you cannot hold the moon in your hand? Tonight when the stars come out and the moon rises in the sky, look outside your window, then raise your hand and position your fingers about the disk of light.” There you go – that was easy.” [Vera Nazarian]
·        “The reality of the creative process is that it often requires persistence, the ability to stick with a process until it makes sense.” [Jonah Lehrer, “Imagine,” p. 56]
·        “The mind is its own place.” [Louise Penney, “A Rule Against Murder,” p. 303]
·        “Often in life you get what you give.” [Anonymous]


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