What Do Gardening, Health & Art Have in Common? Kinds of Kindness.

There was a time when the level of happiness I felt in a day was determined by the number I saw on the scale upon weighing myself each and every morning. As I aged I saw the futility and ridiculousness of that ritual and stopped weighing myself. For many years I lived without a scale in the house. If I’m being truthful, however, to this day, on those rare occasions when I do check in on my weight the number I see still has the power to set my mood.

Something similar happens when I am in my studio. If the work is going well then I’m all smiles. If I’m struggling with the materials, or if I’m certain I’ve ruined a new piece I was enamored with just the day before, I question why I even bother. Then there’s the mental baggage that accompanies me when I’m headed to the studio. If by chance I open that baggage and spill it’s contents then navigating my studio and doing the work my heart wants me to do is made more difficult by the messy mental stumbling blocks I’ve placed in my way. Like my ever-present impostor syndrome, for example. Or the envy I sometimes feel for another artist – their gorgeous work, their incredible success. And when there is envy, shame for feeling envious is not far behind.  

As I write these thoughts I can look out the window and see that the team of gardeners we’ve hired have arrived. It will take some time to clear out decades of overgrowth, to repair a stone wall and to remove the non-native ivy climbing the trunks of our trees. But when the work is finished I will begin to prepare one small bed at the base of the largest tree for planting in spring. Which reminds me of something someone told me a few weeks ago. They told me that gardening is not a project, it’s a process. Indeed.

Two and a half decades ago I joined Weight Watchers and lost sixty unnecessary pounds. I lost the weight so quickly that I gained more than a few gallstones and a nasty case of disordered eating but we can save that story for another day. The mistake I made at the time was thinking of my weight loss journey as a project. And once those pounds were dropped the project was complete. Silly me.

Three years ago, when we moved to Virginia, I was determined to find the artist I abandoned when the need to have a steady income was more urgent than the need to create. Somehow the universe felt my determination and opened a few doors for me. She built a solid foundation for me when I was accepted into the Incubator Program at McGuffey Art Center in Charlottesville.

In 2023 I took on the year-long residency at McGuffey as a project. Show up. Do the work. Exhibit the work. Sell the work. Repeat. What was I thinking?

Gardening is not a project, it’s a process. Holding on to good health is not a project, it’s a process. Creating art that resonates is not a project, it’s a process. I guess it follows, then, that life is not a project. It’s a process. 

It’s a process that begins with kindness. Being kind to my home. Planting seeds. Nourishing the earth beneath my feet. Hard and rewarding work. Being kind to others. Admitting when I’ve made mistakes or when my words have hurt someone. Showing gratitude for deep friendships. Remembering anniversaries and birthdays.

But being kind to my breathing heart? Being kind to my creative heart? That can be challenging.

Manifesting kindness towards myself when I’ve spent seven decades judging and comparing myself to my wealthier friends, to the skinny models I see in magazines, to the artists that speak with eloquence and passion about their work is a struggle. Maybe it requires breaking the habits that keep my self-care and kindness at bay.

Maybe it begins with embracing the truth that the process – whether it’s planting a garden, celebrating good health or creating art  – doesn’t run in a straight line. It meanders and curls and doubles back on itself and then forges ahead. It moves around obstacles, plows through roadblocks, climbs metaphorical mountains and charges down steep hills like a child on a Schwinn Stingray Chopper, bugs in her teeth from smiling too much and bright colored vinyl ribbons dancing from the handlebars.

Each moment of the journey – the bumps, the stumbles, the thrills and delights – they all require different kinds of kindness. Sometimes I have to be forgiving. Sometimes I have to be honest. Sometimes I need to put my nose to the grindstone and sometimes I need to rest. Figuring that out is exasperating. And kinda fun.

Don’t forget…Practically Twisted is disappearing in a few months. If you appreciate my musings, join me at Mimm Patterson Art.


Nests & Vessels

Reminder: Practically Twisted is going to practically disappear soon.

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It’s funny how one word can change everything. Until a few months ago I wore the label ‘mixed media artist’. But it never felt right. Did that mean I was a dabbler? Unable to settle? At best it was an easy way to not have to talk too much about specifics. At worse it made me feel at times like a dilettante. I’ve come to realize that, for me, ‘multidisciplinary’ is a much better fit. It’s a word that grounds me. It’s a word that denotes serious dedication to the work.

Being an artist is an evolving process. Re-framing how I identify as an artist is moving my process forward and bringing me closer to something I consider my authentic voice. 

My work has experienced a dramatic shift over the last two years.  Despite this I remain compelled to explore the energetic imprint we leave behind on the objects we touch and the moments we share with others. Through that exploration I am drawn toward themes of impermanence and fragility.

In 2024 these themes were represented by images very personal to me: my grandmother’s silk hankies, the vase left to me by a late friend. But over time the photo-encaustic work became too literal. At the start of 2025 I began adding encaustic paint and oil pastel over photographs to suggest what I call the ‘ash of memory’. These pieces engage the viewers curiosity as they study the image. They encourage the viewer to find the story I am trying to tell or to create one of their own. 

My latest body of work, however, moves away from story-telling. All art is personal, of course, but I’m tired of my stories. I feel drawn to create work that is less anchored to specific moments experienced and more tethered to feelings for which there are no words. 

I’m releasing my attachment to the artist I believed I should be. I’m learning to trust my intuition, to embrace happy accidents and to break rules.

We are living through unusual, precarious times and I believe my work has been transformed by this new world. The work is my coping mechanism.

And so, for now, I’ll continue to build nests and vessels. Little containers to hold our hopes.


When Art Makes You Cry

When I bring something I’ve thought about in my head to life, and it happens with ease, I feel as if I have super human powers. It doesn’t matter whether I’m searching my brain’s thesaurus for the perfect few words to convey a feeling, or trying to capture with my camera how dawn transforms shadowy black tree trunks into golden beams of light, or attempting to prepare a satisfying evening dinner without a recipe.

When I create – whether it’s good or bad, whether it’s through words or with images – and the work begins to flow, the experience becomes something beyond feeling superhuman. It’s a rare and fleeting moment of connection to The Source. I don’t believe for a moment that I’m special. This euphoric flow is available to all of us. We just need to get out of our own way. 

I knew that our move to a Virginia townhome three times the size of the 600-square-foot apartment we left behind in California would afford me the space to create. Specifically, I would have the space to create visual art. This was not a random whim. I was an art and education major in college. In my thirties I was the quintessential starving, struggling artist. By the time I reached my fifties I thought I’d left all that ‘art nonsense’ behind. But then, as I entered my sixties, we had a global pandemic. The pandemic was a tragic blessing. The shutdown and all the ramifications of being essentially under house arrest by an invisible and deadly invader afforded those of us who remained healthy the time to remember who we were.

I took advantage of the opportunity and remembered that I was an artist. I didn’t do this on my own. I was encouraged by a friend who was beginning her own art journey and of course by Ben, who would support me no matter what path I chose to follow. Our small home limited my options but I could feel my creative impulses coming back to life.

When we settled into our new home in Virginia I set up a space and began my creative practice in earnest. Within a year I had found some success. My work was being exhibited and I was awarded first place in a competition I believed I had no chance of winning. I secured a year-long residency at McGuffey Art Center that culminated in a group show with five other artists and where I am currently renting a studio. This October I will have my first solo exhibit in forty years at a lovely gallery just steps off the Pedestrian Mall in Charlottesville.

It was after we organized the group show in late May, as I was beginning to consider the new body of work I needed for my solo exhibit, that the artist’s block landed on my psyche like a ton of bricks. An artist’s mental block is not too far removed from the ‘twisties’ gymnast Simone Biles experienced at the Tokyo Olympics – minus, of course, the potential for career ending injury or death.

I was lost in my head. Obsessed and over-thinking. Every empty and soulless hour in my once vibrant studio chipped away at my flagging confidence. And as my confidence wavered so did my motivation. The block I was experiencing fueled every limiting self-belief I’ve carried with me since childhood. I knew I was a fraud. I knew the success I achieved  was nothing more than a simple fluke. It was time to let the gallery in Charlottesville know that I would not have work ready for my solo exhibit. I was done.

What felt like a bitter eternity in reality was six precious weeks. But finally, in early July, the block began to shift. It was a heavy burden that I fought like hell to get through. But more and more, momentary flashes of insight would arc through my mind like the faint shooting stars we search for in the wee hours on a warm summer night. 

I was encouraged but hadn’t quite found my footing. And then, two weeks ago, this happened:

It’s the middle of a very hot July. There’s an exhibit of women fiber artists at the Renwick Gallery in Washington, DC that I am desperate to see. Ben and I decide to have a mini-break and head north. On a warm Saturday morning we walk to the gallery from our hotel and discover a small but comprehensive show of work in a gorgeous space. As we move through the exhibit we stop at a piece by artist Lenore Tawney. From a canvas frame suspended several feet above our heads and parallel to the ceiling, Tawney has dropped several hundred – maybe several thousand – thin linen cords. The work is part of her Cloud series. The effect mesmerizes me to the point that tears fill my eyes. It is stunning. An ethereal cube of light comprised of suspended strings floats over the gallery floor. It is spectral and yet, at the same time, it feels solid. 

I hear Ben ask what I’m thinking.

I’m thinking that visual artists are trying to tell a story in a language that cannot be translated for others. A language where fluency is evasive. But the more they work, the more they explore, the more visual vocabulary they gain. This is the difficult path we traverse as we move closer to finding our own voice. Our own visual language.  It is a challenging and sometimes frightening journey because it requires us to look starkly and deeply within. But as we work, as we explore, we begin to scrape away the muck of over-thinking until all that is left is feeling. From there, everything is simple. From there, one thousand linen threads suspended from a ceiling can move a person to tears. 

I don’t know if artists ever find their one true creative voice. Perhaps striving to work from a base of feeling rather than intellect is the best we can do. We learn techniques in the same way a creative chef practices with their set of knives (or a yoga teacher practices asana). And mastering our technique with a brush or a potter’s wheel or a loom is, of course, important. But finding that simple, pure, critical and instinctual base of feeling? To borrow a bit from the Little Prince – that feeling comes from the energetic heart and is invisible to the eye.


Fear or Faith: My Choice

Can you keep a secret? The trainings in which I’ve been entrenched since before the pandemic’s shutdown began are coming to a welcome end and I find myself with a strange amount of time on my hands. But please. Let’s agree to keep this little admission between friends. I don’t want the universe catching wind of my twiddling thumbs because you know as well as I do that empty space loves to be filled. I’d like a chance to see what I do with all this spare time before that happens.

But I’m wondering…now that I have the chance to dive into all those ‘things’ I’ve always wanted to do but never had time for…what’s stopping me?

I’d like to blame the bout of ‘pandemic malaise’ I’m experiencing but to be truthful the malaise I’ve encountered on and off these past twelve months is fleeting. Maybe it has more to do with the weather, which has been unseasonably chilly and wet for mid-March in Northern California. Or maybe what looks like malaise on the outside is really, on the inside, indecision and fear.

Indecision I understand. I’ve always seen both sides of every coin. But why fear? What’s that about?

In a recent coaching conversation I wondered if the fear my client experienced was less about feeling unprepared for the tasks she needed to complete in order to move her project forward and more a fear of wasting time. It was easy for me to share that observation because that is where most of my fear is rooted. I’ve been alive longer than I have years left to live. I don’t want my time wasted. Besides, I need to earn my keep while my jiggly human form still takes up space on this planet. I need to draw a salary. Make money. Pay bills. I don’t have time for flights of fancy.

I wonder, though, if my excuse, “I don’t have time for that”, masks a harder truth. My interests, outside of teaching yoga, require focused attention. Commitment. Awareness of both my strengths and my weaknesses. They require a willingness to learn.

Yeah. Who has time for that? Especially if the final result is an amorphous unknown.

Another friend of mine is an artist. Seven or eight years ago, when we first met, she was learning to paint. Now she wins awards, exhibits regularly and is about to have her work published in two books.

I wonder if she felt her time was wasted while she was learning to turn a flat circle into a sphere? I wonder, when she first picked up a paint brush, if she even considered time?

It’s funny, isn’t it, how we give fear permission to stop us in our tracks? It can be fear of the unknown, fear of time wasted, fear of hard work or fear of financial insecurity. Or, in my case, all four.

Rather than giving fear carte blanche to run our lives, maybe it’s faith we need? 

So. Will turning my fears of the unknown into faith in myself lift the malaise? Will it help me find the motivation and momentum I need to make the transformation from someone who watches from the sidelines into someone who’s willing to take a chance on herself?

Good question. I can’t wait to find out.