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Rachael Taylor announced as a speaker at Do What You Love retreat

Rachael Taylor announced as a speaker at Do What You Love retreat Rachael Taylor Profile

Surface pattern designer Rachael Taylor was voted ‘Happiest Person in Britain’ on Twitter not long ago, and is a really doing what she loves.  As a surface pattern designer and illustrator, Rachael has clients all over the world, and next year she will be bringing out her own line of stationery with US-based Teneues publishing.

Rachael Taylor announced as a speaker at Do What You Love retreat RT Portrait

Rachael graduated in 2005 with a BA (Hons) in Textile in Fashion Design. After working in industry for three years, she set up her own design studio in 2008. Now specialising in surface pattern design and illustration, Rachel works as a freelance designer for clients like WH Smith, Target and Graham and Brown, and runs her own design label, Rachael Taylor Designs. Rachael’s international collaborations include a signature collection with Seascape Lamps USA.

Rachael Taylor announced as a speaker at Do What You Love retreat Quirky Icons web

Rachael has seen real success in a short space of time, and I am delighted that she will be joining us at the Do What You Love art and creative enteprise retreat to share her insight and experience. Rachael will talk about the challenges she has faced and the lessons she has learnt. This will be a unique opportunity to ask Rachael directly about the ins and outs of setting up your own design label, working as a freelance designer, and getting yourself known.

Other speakers at the retreat include Kanya King, Founder and CEO of the MOBO Awards, and Hannah Nunn, designer and owner of Radiance Lighting. The retreat’s art workshop teachers Flora Bowley, Rachel Hazell and Priscilla Jones will also share an insight into the business side of their work, talking about selling your art, licencing, owning a gallery and getting into teaching.

There are only a handful of places left on this unique retreat, which combines creativity, enterprise and community. Don’t miss out on this opportunity to start or grow your creative business, in the company of a community of like-minded people, within a stunning countryside setting here in England. Register now!

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Read Do What You Love interviews with Rachael Taylor here, and Hannah Nunn here.

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Fame at last!

Do you remember I told you about the mystery of the toilet roll and the Nebraskan newspaper?  Well the story made it onto Page 2 of the Arnold Sentinel in Nebraska, the newspaper which originally turned up on my doorstep rolled up in the toilet roll! Here is the article…   Thanks so much to Janet from the paper for sharing it with me.

From the Editor

The whole thing came about as part of the Campaign for Real Mail, which continues apace.  The tins of fish and pineapple I sent my brothers(!) arrived…

Fame at last! ipod 230

Fame at last! ipod 228

…and my little brother thoughtfully sent me this CD.  I am already plotting the next one – watch this space.

Fame at last! cd2

Fame at last! cd1

And this was a lovely surprise – TJ Goerlitz of Studio Mailbox sent this sweet little heart from Germany via ‘Luftpost’ – thank you TJ!

Fame at last! heart1

So with pan-European participation and international media exposure, the Campaign for Real Mail is almost taking over the world!

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How you can help Japan

 How you can help Japan lovejapan

The images we are seeing coming out of Japan are heartbreaking. I hope you will join me in showing Japan some love at this incredibly difficult time. Each of us can do something. Wherever in the world you are, here are a few things you can do right away:

Donate

The Red Cross is on the ground distributing vital blankets, food, water and other necessities. Donate here (Japanese Red Cross),here (British Red Cross) or here (American Red Cross). In the US you can also donate $10 via text message by texting “REDCROSS” to 90999. Please share these links with everyone you know.

Spread the word

Add the image at the top of this post to your blog or Facebook page and link it to https://www.dowhatyouloveforlife.com/helpjapan to spread the word about ways people can help. Feel free to copy and paste any part of this message if you like.

Got skills?

If you can interpret at a good level between Japanese and another major language, you can register with the Japan Association of Translators to provide your services from where you are, via Skype or mobile phone. The Tokyo Interpreting Academy is also putting together a register of standby volunteer interpreters to be deployed once the Japanese government gives the green light. Find out more here. If you can spare time to translate Japanese to English, you can support Japanese NGOs in providing vital information to the international community in Japan. Please send me an email and I will have your name added to the translators’ mailing list.

Got a free room?

If you live in Japan and have a free room to take in people who have been displaced by the disaster, you can offer this via Couchsurfing.

Thank you so much. We can all play our part.

Beth Xx

Playing with plaster

During the retreat I attended recently in California, I popped into another studio to have a nosey at what they were doing in Stephanie Lee’s class, and see Lorrie, Lindy and Louise working away on their plaster creations.  I have always loved wax, and couldn’t resist having a go myself.

wax art

Under their guidance I made this picture – not bad for under an hour!

wax art 1

I can see why Louise has declared it was love at first sight with plaster…  I just love the way the glaze seeped into the cracked plaster, and how the wax drank in the brown paint where markings were scratched into it.

wax art 2

My man hung it on the wall yesterday, with the new drill I got him for Christmas (but am now coveting – it’s so cool!)

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Have you ever tried playing with plaster and wax? Such fun!

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Finding the courage to follow your heart: Erin Wigger and Louise Gale share their stories

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This week we share two stories from New York City – photojournalist Erin Wigger and  Louise Gale, a British artist living in the US*.

* Since this post was published Louise has moved to Spain. 

Erin Wagger

Erin Wigger

To do what I love means that I live with passion, purpose and a good amount of self-sacrifice. It means that every day I wake up and choose to live my life as a storyteller. I am a photographer and I tell life stories, death stories and everything in between.

I studied abroad for my sophomore year in Jerusalem, Israel and a friend’s father hooked me up with the number for the Associated Press office in town. I cold-called the editor and asked if he needed an intern. “I will clean your toilets or anything you need”, I remember telling him. I didn’t have a portfolio, or even any pictures to show, just hubris and the vague, unshakeable idea that this was the place for me.  I now think he just wanted a cute young thing around the office, but it didn’t matter because I was in.

My first day on the job I photographed a demonstration in Bethlehem. Tear gas, rubber bullets and rocks. That was my first glimpse into real journalism. As I ran directly into the tear gas I remember thinking that this was the only thing I ever wanted to do. I decided right there to become a photojournalist. I spent the rest of the year photographing major events in Israel. I skipped class to go to demonstrations in Hebron and Ramallah. I talked my way into private Christmas services at the Church of the Nativity and took one of the only pictures of Yasser Arafat at a Christian mass. I was fearless and on fire. I failed most of my classes that year and never got a better education.

India

I went to school for photography, which isn’t for everyone, but I knew I needed to learn how to see. Anyone can press a button on a camera, but I wanted to know about who had come before me and find my place.

Now I freelance as a photographer in New York City, the most competitive place in this industry. It hasn’t been easy to survive. I do personal projects that make me no money and pray that they get noticed. But I still live for that thrill of meeting someone new and hearing their story. I am granted the gift of curiosity and this life enables me to indulge in it.  I started photographing weddings and realized that there were stories there too, amazing ones that needed to be told truly.

India 1

I’ve had many crises of faith. Photojournalism is not a life that can be lived halfway. You will never be rich with money, but you will meet the most incredible people and be a small part of their lives. You will be a voice for them. I’ve backed away from my dream many, many times. I have been scared at the depth of my ambition. I want to tell big stories that matter and that’s what keeps me striving even when the going is rough.

India 3

(All images courtesy of Erin Wigger)

Find out more about Erin and her work on her website

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Louise Gale

Louise Gale portrait(Photo courtesy of Louise Gale)

I love that I can be creative everyday. I love that I go to bed at night contented and full of gratitude. I love waking up, excited to see what the day will bring. I love the connections I have made with other creative souls out there and the strong bonds that are forming. I love that I am listening to the universe and myself, and that I feel aligned and on the path I am meant to be on. There are so many things I am happy about in this present time of my life that I can honestly say I am doing what I love.

Louise Gale ART‘Burst’

My website was born to enable me to dream more, be inspired and inspire others, start creating art again and ultimately create the life I was born to live. It has done just that and I am so proud to say that I am now helping others dream big through my e-courses, and inspiring them with stories of serendipity and the universe. Through creating and exhibiting art, and through the life I am living, a wonderful community is forming, made up of people who support each other to explore and grow.

Louise Gale 'Green life or grey life?'‘Green life or grey life?’

When I think of all the significant moments and scary decisions in my life, they have led me here, to do what I do, to the people I have met and the person I am. Growing up in the UK, my parents taught me “to go against the grain” and not always follow the crowd. My art teacher at school told me I wasn’t good enough – and that taught me “to try it anyway” (and guess what? I got in to art school!). Not having a job in a creative field right away taught me I could still be creative. The numerous jobs I had taught me it’s good to try new things and go back to your passion when the time is right. Living in Australia and travelling to far away lands taught me to be adventurous, face my fears and be a free spirit. There are many other life lessons have brought me to where I am now.

Louise Gale 'Botanical garden' ‘Botanical garden’ 

The greatest lesson in my life so far is to trust myself, my instincts and my intuition, and that positive thinking and determination will lead me to where I am meant to go. Being able to be creative every day saved me through the tough times of working in a windowless office and enabled me to actually realise, I COULD turn my dreams into reality.

May 1st 2011 marks my one year anniversary of this new life. The corporate life that brought me to America back in 2004 seems so far away now.  I am also about to embark on training for my Life Coaching Certificate and I can’t wait to continue to help others follow their dreams.

Louise Gale 'Out of this world'‘Out of this world’

For more information about Louise, visit her website, or connect on Facebook.

[All images courtesy of Louise Gale]

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Would you like to share your story on Do What You Love? Please read this and contact me for more details.

What on earth is everyone thinking?

do what you love

New research published by Accenture to mark International Women’s Day today shows some staggering results, about just how many people aren’t doing what they love. According to this article, the research, which surveyed more than 3,400 professionals in 29 countries, compared responses of equal numbers of women and men and found that fewer than half (43% of women and 42% of men) of all respondents are satisfied with their current jobs, but nearly three-quarters (70 percent of women and 69 percent of men) plan to stay with their companies. Released today as part of Accenture’s 2011 celebration of International Women’s Day, the research also found that the top reasons for respondents’ dissatisfaction are:

– being underpaid (cited by 47% of women versus 44% of men)

– a lack of opportunity for growth (36% versus 32%);

– no opportunity for career advancement (33% versus 34%);

– feeling trapped (29% versus 32%)

Come on everyone! This is your life you are talking about. Surely it is time to start doing what you love?

“Yes, but…”, I hear you say. No buts. This is as important as it gets.

If you want to do what you love but don’t know where to start…

– get some inspiration from these shared stories.

– read these interviews with inspiring people doing what they love.

or join the Do What You Love e-course – a six-week online adventure that will take you step-by-step towards doing what you love.

Class starts on Monday. The time is now!

Register here, and start doing what you love

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Finding your purpose: three inspiring women share their stories

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Today’s *shared stories* come from artists Jan Avellana of Hazelnut Cottage, from Hawaii, and Liv Lane and Bonnie Rose Kempenich in the US.

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 Jan Avellana

 Jan Avellana

“Doing what you love” is so closely tied into my vocation. After two degrees, a career in graphic design and a stint as an elementary school teacher, I became a first time mother. Taking my maternity leave I was such a relief! I was beyond miserable—no career ever seemed to fit and I was wading through depression, desperately seeking answers to what was wrong with me.

Today, doing what I love means I spend late nights in the studio pursuing my growing passion for mixed-media art and then, even after just a few hours of sleep, looking forward to spending my day with my family and my art. I not only love my life, I love my work! It has taken me my entire adult life to get to this place of joy.

I think I realized way back in design school during college that I wanted to be an artist. However, it wasn’t until a decade later that I re-discovered my creative passions. I was so filled with dread at the thought of going back to my 9-5 job and having to leave my two babies in someone else’s care. One night, I happened to stumble upon Etsy and the indie artist community. It was then that I knew I had found my tribe! I started out in 2007 with a line of hand-stamped silver jewelry. It has taken me a long time to understand and accept that I am a mixed-media artist and that connecting deeply with others through my work is integral to my sanity; it is indeed my God-given purpose!

After realizing that I was an indie artist, I opened up an Etsy shop under the name of Hazelnut Cottage. I began blogging. And slowly, slowly, found myself digging up long-abandoned dreams of being a mixed-media artist and a writer. About six months ago, I began playing in the studio; painting, creating collage and tiny clay pieces in earnest. I am currently making the transition from jewelry designer to mixed-media artist and hope to begin introducing a new line of paintings I am working on, soon!

Finding your purpose: three inspiring women share their stories studioP1000845

Along the way I have had to sacrifice sleep! I opened up my Etsy shop when my youngest son was just about three months old, so there have been many sleepless nights. Now that I am transitioning from making jewelry (my current day job) to offering my mixed-media works for sale, there has been less income from my jewelry line. My family and I have also made lots of financial sacrifices now that much of my energy and time is now devoted to developing a body of mixed-media work.

With hindsight, I wish I had known myself better, sooner. I wish I had discovered and embraced my artistic loves at a much younger age. If anything, my sometimes tortured experience now compels me to encourage other artists—especially emerging artists—with the kind of support I wish I had back then, and still need today.

Now I have so many big art dreams! First and foremost, I want to develop a strong artistic style and a body of work that feels uniquely my own. I’ve been exploring in the studio quite a bit, but I have yet to settle on any particular style or media. My focus right now is to faithfully show up in the studio and guard against discouragement by quieting my inner critic and allowing myself to have fun making lots and lots of art!

[Images courtesy of Jan Avellana]  Find out more about Jan over on her blog, or see her lovely creations in her Etsy shop, Hazlenut Cottage.

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Liv Lane

Liv Lane[Photo credit: Amy Zellmer for Savvy.MN]

I have a brand new light. Not in my house, but in my spirit. When I write or speak about getting unstuck and finding your passion, I often share how I went from living in the dark – the result of postpartum depression and post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) – to learning how to shine again from the inside out. Our lights may flicker and dim at certain points in our lives, but I believe it’s always possible to feel illuminated again – even brighter than before. 

When my son was two, I took him to a music class. On the first day, we all sat in a circle – toddlers in their parents’ laps – and the teacher asked us to each share something we loved to do. As parents and kids shared their favorite pastimes, I started to panic. I couldn’t think of anything I enjoyed doing. My mind raced, my heart pounded. When it was our turn to share, my little boy blurted out, “play trucks!” And all I could utter was, “Me too. I like to play trucks, too.” That experience was a warning sign for me that something was wrong. You’d think it would have been the awareness that I’d pinpointed which bridges in town would be easiest to drive off or that I sobbed at the drop of a hat. But it was the realization that I no longer liked to do ANYTHING that caught my attention.

I know it sounds crazy, but it felt like I had joy amnesia. So, with help from my therapist, I began to discover the pastimes that made my heart skip a beat – some new, some old. I experimented with different activities, expanded my social circle, and gave myself permission to back out of the things that didn’t thrill me (sorry, neighborhood Bunco ladies!). Eventually, I began to notice the pastimes that illuminated true happiness within me: writing, broadcasting, taking photographs, antiquing, doodling, scrapbooking. Those were so much fun for me that I’d lose track of time.

Eventually, those hobbies not only brought joy back into my personal life, but some of them worked their way into my professional life. My corporate job no longer felt right; it stressed me out and didn’t fulfill me. So, my husband and I devised a plan that allowed me to leave the daily grind behind and work for myself – writing, blogging, picture-taking, speaking, and broadcasting about healing, happiness and the beauty in every day. I officially launched my one-woman company, Choosing Beauty, and threw an Independence Day party for myself on 7/7/07. I felt so free and energized!

My heart was so full that I never imagined there might be even more waiting for me around the bend. But now I have another twinkle in my eye: I’ve given birth to the artist within. Until 2010, I’d never been brave enough to call myself an artist. I loved making handmade treasures for loved ones and spent countless hours fawning over Etsy shops. But I never dreamed of creating my own. I was too worried that I wouldn’t measure up to professional artists or that people wouldn’t like my work.

Those fears flew out the window in the spring of 2010 when I discovered mixed media collage – a medium that lets me blend my writing, photography, and love of all things beautiful. On a whim, I signed up for Kelly Rae Roberts’ inaugural Flying Lessons e-course and it couldn’t have come at a better time. Through that class, I discovered an online community of amazing creative spirits and dream cheerleaders who rooted for me as I embraced my art. Suddenly, what others thought of my creations didn’t matter anymore. I felt too fulfilled and fired up to care.

Rise and shine[Image courtesy of Liv Lane]

I turned our dining room into my art studio (we call it the “dudio”) and I launched my Etsy shop in late August 2010.  My husband worried that opening a shop and making money from my art might diminish the joy I get out of creating it. But the opposite has been true. Knowing my artwork touches others while providing a source of income inspires me to create from the heart. It helps put food on the table and it feeds my soul.

You know how a room changes so dramatically when you add a new light fixture? The whole space shines in a new way. Today, each facet of the work I do adds new dimension to my life and illuminates my path. I feel so blessed. Those dark days, when I couldn’t think of a single passion, now seem light years away. I am doing what I love and allowing myself to shine from the inside out.

Liv Lane is an artist, writer, radio host, and speaker dedicated to illuminating the magic in each day. She is also the creator of The Feel Good Deal of the Day – a weekday email featuring discounts on uplifting, creative resources and products. Find Liv at her Choosing Beauty blog and on Twitter (@choosingbeauty).

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Bonita Rose (Bonnie Rose) Kempenich

Bonita Rose

I am doing what I love every day and feel so so blessed with the life I am now living. I truly do. I’m a 49 year old mother of two beautiful young women, now living in Fargo with my husband, Greg and our dog Angel. My daughters live about 4 hours north of us up in Canada. I see them often in the school year and over holidays and breaks. Being a noncustodial parent, especially a mother can often be so hard. I find not many people can understand how I feel every day. And that’s okay. It takes a lot to walk a mile in my shoes, it really does.

And honestly, I’ve learned most are just too busy traveling on their own journeys in this life to figure out what they love. Each of our journeys is so so different. One thing I’ve learned is that art truly saves. It saves me every day. Every day.

The bird that soars the highest

Years ago, while living through the midst of an ugly divorce and custody battle, and having to deal with mediators and supervised visitation and all of that, I clung to my art, my crafting, my hobbies. It is what kept me alive during this time. It gave me hope for better days ahead. It sprinkled my days with joy when back then, joy was oh so very hard to come by.
Art has saved me over and over again.

Breathe

There was a time when I thought to myself, why bother? Why me? So many people out there are making art, creating beautiful work, have gorgeous websites, why me? Why should I even try to do anything? It’s so easy to feel you aren’t valued. You aren’t worthy. You’re not good enough.

It’s a constant fight as a creative soul.
As a human being, I struggle daily with those thoughts.
Daily.

Climb that mountain

One thing I’ve realized in my life – through the challenging times, and even now, during times of comfort, is that people that take the time to show you love and support are the people that truly matter. They help you get to the other side. They uplift you when you so so need it. They whisper in your ear, things you can barely believe about yourself. You want to believe these things. So slowly, with every passing day, you grow stronger. You start to believe again. You start to look in the mirror and finally, you see all the possibilities.

Doing what you love.
It’s so different for each of us.
It truly is.
We all bring different talents and passions and our life stories to the table. We all have something to contribute. To give. To make this world a better place. We all have a way to inspire others. Every single one of us.


Know what excites you

I chose the word COURAGEOUS as my word this year, and so far, it has steered me towards so many wonderful possibilities. So so many. I am currently developing my own website which will be unveiled at BonitaRose.com in the coming months – along with a shiny new blog and an Etsy shop makeover! I’m excited about the future, about what is to come!

Don’t get me wrong. All I really want to do is inspire. To share my creativity and my passions with all of you. I don’t look at blog statistics. I am not one to worry about how many comments I receive on my blog. I write, I share because it’s what I want to do. I want to inspire plain and simple. With lots of bold bold color! I’m doing what I love and right now, I feel so blessed to have a supportive tribe that loves me and supports me in my journey. Love to all of you that truly believe in me. People can make such a difference. 

If you can imagine it...[All images courtesy of Bonnie Rose Kempenich.] 

Find out more about Bonnie Rose on her blog, see her work in her Etsy shop or connect on Facebook or Twitter.  Bonnie Rose also runs a self-paced e-course, Color Your World 2.0.  The classroom opens on April 1st – you can register here.

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Would you like to share your story on Do What You Love?  Please see here and contact me for more details.

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Heavenly check list

Heavenly check list Natural Retreats 1

Bunnies hopping past the front door… check

Fresh bread and homemade jam on the kitchen table… check

View for 50 miles across some of England’s loveliest countryside… check

The smell of wood smoke in the air… check

Bird song the music of the day… check

Friendly farmers and a family of deer… check

Wine and candles on the deck… check

What more could anyone want?

When I found this place last year, I knew it was exactly what I was looking for as the home for the Do What You Love art and creative enterprise retreat.  It is beautiful, expansive, welcoming. It feels a million miles from anywhere, but is less than an hour from where I live, and only 5 minutes from the nearest town – a historic place nearly 1,000 years old. I am here on a site visit preparing for the retreat in May, and while I mean to be particular with details like the tipi orientation, bonfire location and where to serve afternoon
tea and cake, my mind keeps drifting like the little white clouds in the sky, over the hills and out into nature which surrounds us. This place is bliss, and I can’t wait until it is filled with the creative energy of people doing what they love. Just a little more drifting before I get back to work…

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There are only a few places left on the Do What You love art retreat, which combines creativity, enterprise and community to help you do what you love, for life. Our stellar line-up of business speakers will be announced soon. In the meantime, find out more and register here.

My California girls

California girls

(L-R Mindy Lacefield, me, Danielle Fraser, Louise Gale, Stella Singleton, Juliette Crane – I think Lindy McClellan must be taking the picture!)

There are some people in this life who it feels like you were supposed to meet. People you needed to open your eyes to something – something about you, about the world around you, or about your path.  This is how I feel about the AAJ girls.  When I met them for the first time last year, I somehow found myself in California, not really knowing why I was there. I didn’t even know what a blog was, and hadn’t picked up a paintbrush in a long time.  In that special place in the shadow of the redwoods, I discovered the magic of art retreats. Somehow this amazing bunch of gorgeous gals made that trip a turning point for me, and everything changed.

My California girls lorrieLorrie Spotts

 

 

My California girls stella 1Stella Singleton

We laughed, we drank tea, we talked long into the night, we painted, we ate together, we drank lots of wine. It was as if time stood still for four days, and yet it went so fast.


PaintOnly cheap paints allowed for this workshop!

It was wonderful to meet up with them and all the others from last year again – and to send love out into the world to those girls who couldn’t make it back for the second time (like Chrissy, Cathy, Anna-MariePeggy and Joli). And lovely to meet new creative souls too (like Karen, Nelly, Michelle, Amy, Carrie and Gwynnie B), to share this awesome journey.

Love y’all!

My California girls hands

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You can read more about the crazy painting class I took with the awesome Jesse Reno here – and see what I painted here!

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My California girls

Art retreats are incredibly powerful experiences.  Join a group of likeminded souls at the Do What You Love art and creative enterprise retreat in the English countryside in May – just a few places left, register now!

Do What You Love interview – Jennifer Lee

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Jennifer Lee, author of The Right-Brain Business Plan,  is a certified coach, writer, artist, yogini, and the founder of Artizen Coaching. Before pursuing her own passions full-time, she consulted for ten years for companies such as Gap Inc., Accenture, Sony, and HP, helping leaders and organizations manage change. Now she is on a mission to empower people to awaken their innate creativity and make a living doing what they love. When she’s not coaching, writing, or leading groups, she’s either painting up a storm, reading in her hammock, practicing yoga, making arts and crafts, or indulging in a midday nap (one of the fabulous perks of being self-employed).  She made the leap from corporate America, when she realized she needed to ‘stop living my dream on the side’.

Do What You Love interview - Jennifer Lee jennlee 300px 0018

Today Jenn talks about her innovative new book, and what how she helps people live their dreams, in her role as a ‘life and business coach’.

(more…)