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Going out on a Limb

Going out on a Limb

I was eating dinner with some close friends the other night. Their daughter attends high school in the area – a traditional academic-and-sports-oriented campus in which students’ progress is closely monitored via testing. My heart goes out to those families caught...
The Creative Teenager

The Creative Teenager

I don’t have any easy answers in this week’s post. This entry is more a set of observations that raises a fundamental question about child development. How do we cultivate a safe space for teenagers to continue with creative endeavors? Younger children need little...
Naming the Wilderness

Naming the Wilderness

In his book, “Last Child in the Woods,” Richard Louv makes a remarkable observation. He believes that children must interact with nature in order to embrace the notion of mystery. In his opinion, mystery is a fundamental quality of human development that cannot be...
Focused Relaxation

Focused Relaxation

The child development expert and coach Thanna Vickerman talks about the need for children to immerse themselves in the flow of things. Left to their own devices, children naturally fall into these moments of reverie. The expansion of their imagination takes flight in...
Invent New Forms

Invent New Forms

Sometimes it feels as if everything has already been done. There is no room for still another portrait or another novel. It is time, then, to consider the art of inventing new forms. Michael Shapiro, in his inspiring book, “The Creative Spark,” relates that Ian...
Creativity and the Art of Juggling

Creativity and the Art of Juggling

I am a big fan of the Japanese novelist Haruki Murakami. I have devoured each of his books, and now they sit prominently on my bookshelf, close at hand, in case I need inspiration. His characters inhabit flamboyant and imaginative worlds, such as “Killing...