Flower Mandalas

Recently in Flower Mandalas Category

Monday August 3, 2009

Help wanted!

Gazania V.jpg

I am currently looking for someone to assist me in marketing my Flower Mandala images. I've won a grant and have sporadically licensed some of these images or have sold prints, but I believe this work is a good candidates for larger distribution. I'm looking for someone to work with me on finding/defining a market.

I view this internship as either a segue into a part-time job as an art representative (representing not only me but other artists, where I am the "beta site" for the marketeer) or simply as a learning experience that combines an investigation into the art and advertising market with development and implementation of a product marketing strategy.

The intern would work in three primary sub-areas:

- Identify potential products that could be created from the images (such as tiles, prints, fabric, note cards, etc.) and potential manufacturers of these products. One niche market is the New Age market, so current manufacturers of New Age products could be targeted, but I believe, based on the limited licensing sales I've done so far, that the images also have potential as designs on numerous commercial products.

- Identify broader licensing opportunities for the images, primarily relying on 1) manufacturers of compatible products, as described above, and 2) searches of creative directors and other image consumers working for advertising and design firms. These names (and their complete contact information) are available through an agency which "rents" use of their extensive database of these firms, to which I would subscribe.

- Develop and implement a strategy for creating and marketing products created from these images and for licensing images to creative directors at advertising agencies and/or graphic design departments.

I would supervise the intern, in conjunction with a business development consultant I'm working with. The number of hours per week, and the duration of the internship, would need to be worked out with the intern and his/her supervising professor. My preference would be to work with someone at one of the colleges in the Boston area, or with someone treating this as a creative part-time venture and able to work on a percentage of sales basis, but I'm also open to other arrangements. Working with half a dozen artists in the manner described above would, I think, be an interesting part-time job, and it could evolve into something much more.

Please e-mail me if you're interested!

Thanks,
- David
David J. Bookbinder, LMHC

© 2009, David J. Bookbinder
davidbookbinder.com


Sunday August 2, 2009

Creativity in Counseling

Iris Germanica I_sepia.jpg

Iris Germanica (sepia)

Following is a description of some of the ways I use creativity in working with counseling clients. Perhaps some of you will find them useful. If you have experience of working with creativity in a counseling context, I'd love to hear of your experiences, either via e-mail or as a comment to this post.

More anon,
David

Writing Techniques

Memoirs of Addiction and Recovery (working with addicts, writing, and the Hero's Journey)

I often find that addicts are creative and sensitive people who grew up in the wrong place. Addiction is often a way of coping for them, one that leads, generally, to further trauma. Art, had they grown up in a different environment, might have been a way they had instead chosen to deal with their more sensitive take on the world.

I can help bring them back to the art and the energy that has been sidetracked into addiction: to redirect this energy into something that feeds rather than depletes them, heals rather than retraumatizes. A future they might not have had opens up because they learn to re-channel this energy. I see them as people who were, or could have been, on a creative or spiritual path who got diverted because of trauma, and I see addiction as the "spell" that held them there. I help them get back on their main path through letting them experience highs from being creative instead of from addictive, self-destructive behaviors.

One way I combine creativity and addiction is in writing groups I call "Memoirs of Addiction and Recovery." I create a temporary writing community that helps addicts feel accompanied on their recovery and broadens their ability to overcome discouragement and shame and to recover their true selves. I also sometimes work with clients individually, using writing in a similar way. The framework I often use is Joseph Campbell's monomyth of the Hero's Journey, which not only rescues from shame the dark period of the clients' lives, but gives them a path to go forward on where they will eventually obtain a true boon to themselves, others, or both.

Wounded Child/Inner Healer two-hands writing technique

Imagine yourself walking in a familiar place. In the distance you see someone walking toward you. When the person gets closer, you see it's a child. When still closer, you see that it is your younger self. Imagine that this child is feeling a confusing or disturbing feeling that you, yourself, are feeling. Notice how old the child is, how the child looks and acts. Imagine, as well, that you are feeling at your most compassionate and empathic. With your dominant hand, write what you would say to this child. With your non-dominant hand, imagining yourself to be this child, feeling what is bothering him or her, respond. Continue to go back and forth between dominant and non-dominant hands until you come to some resolution.

Visualization techniques

The Miracle Question (from Solution-Focused Therapy)

I have blogged about this before, but it is so helpful it seems worth repeating here.

After letting clients complain about their problems in their lives, I ask them to imagine this:

After our session, you go off and do whatever you do with the rest of the day. Tonight, you fall asleep. And while you're snoozing, a strange thing happens. The strange thing is that... a miracle occurs! The miracle is a very special one, tailored just to you. The miracle is that all your problems are solved and all your concerns are gone. Poof! But the thing is, the miracle happened while you were asleep, so you don't know anything about it. When you wake up tomorrow, you are solidly in the world of the miracle, but initially you are unaware that it has occurred. So the initial question is: Tomorrow morning, when you wake up and as you step through the day, what do you notice -- in yourself, in your surroundings, in other people -- that eventually gets you scratching your head, thinking, "Something's different about today. A miracle must have happened!"

Asking yourself this question is akin to the call to adventure on the hero's journey. It will take you into new territory, and there you will encounter struggles you might not otherwise have had to endure. But it is also the first step to finding your personal boon, and to making your miracle your reality.

The "Miracle Question" is based on the principle that we do have the answers, and it's a way to envision, while awake but in a kind of self-induced light trance, what life will be like, in great detail, when all our problems are solved. Some questions to ask yourself, after asking the Miracle Question:

- How do I feel when I open my eyes the next morning, the first morning of my miracle life?
- Am I in the same bedroom? The same house? With the same people?
- What's different as I get ready for the day?
- What's different as I walk through it, hour by hour?
- What do other people in my life notice about me that's different?
- What do I notice about them?

From the answers to these questions, which eventually give you the "Totto, we're not in Kansas anymore" feeling, a vision of life with all the problems solved is built. Then it's just a matter of working toward that "miracle," one doable step at a time.

Breaking the Trauma Re-enactment Triangle

Imagine three parts of yourself: the injured child (victim of abuse), the abuser, and a non-protecting bystander. Re-enact the trauma re-enactment triangle of abuser, victim, non-protecting bystander. Now, imagine a true protector who intervenes on your behalf, defending you against the internalized abuser. Work through this re-enactment, calling on whatever forces are needed to render the abuser harmless and the injured child self safe.

Psychodrama techniques

Sometimes I work with client to develop a "character" that is able to do or be or feel something that the client, in his or her everyday life, cannot. I work with the client to create the background, the voice, the mannerisms, the style of dress. We may even do a therapy session or part of a session with the client acting as that character. The goal is for the client to be that character in his or her life, allowing the client to do what, inside, he or she actually wants to do.

Splitting Ambivalence (a variation of Gestalt)

With a client ambivalent about something, I will often effectively divide the client into two parts (or more) and have the client move around the room, from chair to chair, speaking as first one part then the other. We treat this as a debate and it continues until all sides have fully had their say. Then, we imagine another part of has been watching this debate. That part reflects on the points each side has made, then sees if it can help the "others" come to a resolution that satisfies all sides.

Splitting Ambivalence (a variation of Focusing)

Here, the client divides into two parts, each of which has two halves -- one half that wants something for the client, the other half that doesn't want the client to have to experience something. We use Focusing to work each half of each part, until they come to a potential resolution.


Discussion:
Art, Healing, and Transformation group
Flower Mandalas Project group
Cultivating Creativity group

Request the 15 Flower Mandalas screensaver: Fifteen Flower Mandalas

© 2009, David J. Bookbinder
davidbookbinder.com

Tuesday February 17, 2009

Film: "healing image"

A little over a year ago, roughly coinciding with the 15th anniversary of my near-death experience, my good friend Larry "Doc" Pruyne completed a short film about me. It tells the story of my flower mandala images, my work as a psychotherapist, my personal journey of near-death survival, and the connections between them. As NDE anniversary number 16 approaches on February 21, 2009, I wanted to post his film here.

Larry knows my story better than anyone. He is the person who drove me home from the hospital that nearly killed me, and our friendship has been mellowing and deepening ever since. My life and his have intertwined in many ways during the past 16 years, and this film represents, in part, the product of that interweaving. It was a reluctant collaboration: Larry came into it with his own ideas of about how to tell the story, and of course so did I. The film mingles our two points of view not only about my story but also about art, healing, transformation, and storytelling itself. It is a snapshot both of the period during which it was shot and of our friendship. As we evolve, perhaps it will, too.

healing image is also the prototype for a series of films Larry is working on that that deal with art, artists, and the artistic process.


Click here to view 'healing image'

Contact:
Lawrence "Doc" Pruyne is a filmmaker and writer in the Boston area, with over 800 articles and stories published. His film healing image has been widely displayed for college audiences and at festivals, including a Best Short at the Somewhat North of Boston Film Festival. He can be reached at docpruyne1@verizon.net.

Discussion:
Art, Healing, and Transformation group
Flower Mandalas Project group
Cultivating Creativity group

Request the 15 Flower Mandalas screensaver: Fifteen Flower Mandalas

Images © 2005-2009, David J. Bookbinder
'healing image' film © 2008, Lawrence Pruyne

Saturday February 7, 2009

Guest Blog Entry: Flower Essence Mandalas

turkscap_pansy_dianthus2_web.jpg
Flower Essence Mandala: Turkscap-Pansy-Dianthus

Flower Essence Mandalas
By Mary Kraemer

I use edible flowers to create by hand a mini-cosmos for healing with the medicinal and spiritual qualities of the flowers and as a mediation tool. I invite you to take a moment to absorb the imageinto your mind and body and feel its qualities transform you.

Mandala in Sanskrit means essence, or containing; also translates as circle-circumference or concentric diagram having spiritual and ritual significance in both Buddhism and Hinduism.

Flower Essence prescription of Giant Turkscap - Malvaviscus Arboreus, Pansy, Dianthus Mandala:

Meditate on the root chakra receiving healing. This essence releases pent up creative forces within the womb area and literally sets one free to dance again in life. Corrective of imbalance: connecting with their sexuality often due to abuse. Eliminates fear and greed and brings contentment. Pansy is an immune builder as it draws out from within the individual the purest quality of heart and mind. Pansy helps us to 'face' the world, thereby, strengthening our courage to share our beauty with the world. Pansy clears negative thoughts and opens the heart chakra. Dianthus at the center promotes new perspectives on seemingly endless situations.

In different spiritual traditions, mandalas are used for focusing attention; as a spiritual teaching tool; for establishing a sacred space; and as an aid to meditation and trance induction. Its symbolic nature can help one to access progressively deeper levels of the unconscious, ultimately assisting the meditator to experience a mystical sense of oneness with the ultimate unity from which the cosmos in all its manifold forms arises. The psychoanalyst Carl Jung saw the mandala as a representation of the unconscious self, and believed his paintings of mandalas enabled him to identify emotional disorders and work towards wholeness in personality.

Mandala represents the cosmos metaphysically or symbolically, a microcosm of the Universe from the human perspective and a microcosm representing various divine powers at work in the universe.

Mandalas are a sacred places reminding the viewer of the sanctity in the Universe and its potential in his or her self. The purpose being to put an end to human suffering, be enlightened and to discover divinity within one's own self.

When I created this design and shot this photo, I used what flowers I had available as well as what design I was drawn to making. I had hoped to heal others as well as myself when making it as is my intention. But it isn't till I write this that I realize this specific flower combination heals me as well. I too suffer from great bouts of fear and feel unable to dance. My situation being unemployed and a single parent makes my suffering acute as my children are in this situation as well. I really need pansy to help face this situation and clear my negative thoughts. Dianthus additionally helps me have new perspective on the situation seemingly that is endless.

Thanks for giving me a forum.

Mary Kraemer
mary@rosamilagrosa.com
512-482-0777
www.RosaMilagrosa.com

Edible Flower Photography, Edible Flower Mandalas for Cakes, Healing with Holographic Repatterning

Discussion:
Art, Healing, and Transformation group
Flower Mandalas Project group
Cultivating Creativity group

Request the 15 Flower Mandalas screensaver: Fifteen Flower Mandalas

© 2009, Mary Kraemer

Thursday January 8, 2009

Learning to Fly

Spoon Chrysanthemum I.jpg

Spoon Chrysanthemum

I've become relatively inactive in Beliefnet this past few months, absorbed in the other aspects of my life, but I'd like to start the New Year with a report on my personal progress on working toward the "miracle question" and its way of envisioning change.

I'm probably a 7 on the progress in my inner life (where 1 is as far as I ever was from my personal miracle, and 10 is I am there every day). Progress this past year is largely due to taking another Focusing training and finding a Focusing partner, with whom I'm starting to explore, and hopefully to release, a part of myself that has been hidden since early childhood. This is the "little boy" side, the side with much of my creativity and joy, who 20 years ago I imagined to be contained in a titanium capsule six inches thick, but who now is a very real, if still timid, presense in my life.

On the counseling business side, I'm probably also a 7. I have finished up working at the community mental health clinic I'd been working at for 3 1/2 years and am now fully in private practice in Danvers, MA. Until September, the financial side of this was going surprisingly well -- I was getting perhaps a call a week from various sources, and most of them resulted in clients coming to work with me -- but this has dropped off since the financial crash, and I need to figure out ways to generate more referrals. I'm working on it.

On the art-making and art-marketing side, I'm probably a 6. I'm still working on finding a market for the flower mandalas (and am happy to hear suggestions / make connections through this forum), but I haven't created any new mandala work in a long time, nor have I made a lot of headway in finding someone to represent me. I'm continuing work on my Independence Park project (a study of the sea, the sky, and time) and am beginning to broaden the concept in ways I find myself thinking about when I'm doing other things -- always a good sign. And I'm starting to appreciate my growing skills as a photographer. I feel that a move to a new level is afoot, though where that will take me I don't know.

On the spiritual side, I have found a group of people and a teacher who, as I've written earlier here, is combining his study of the major world's religions into a practice that draws on several traditions in an integrated way. It seems well-adapted to our times and the migration of practices from west to east and east to west. I'm not 100% sure this is the way I want to go, so I'm also planning to reconnect with the Thich Nhat Hanh sanga of which I was briefly a member several years ago. Here, too, moving to a new level is afoot.

On the personal plain, where I've been about a 3 most of the past year, I'm now about a 7.5 and moving up the scale rather quickly, having found a partner quite different from prior partners. I feel seen and connected in a new way, and I find I'm also able to process, both within myself and with her, old baggage, and I'm starting to let it go. In part, this process is due to who each of us is, but it is also helped by my work as a counselor. I seem consistently to be taking insights from my personal work into my practice and vice-versa, so that each enriches the other.

Overall, I'd say I'm a 7, and on the threshhold of a major move up, as the various threads of myself and my life that I've been working on integrating since my near-death experience seem, finally, to be coming together. As Tom Petty said in "Learning to Fly," the future is wide open....

More anon,
- David

Discussion:
Art, Healing, and Transformation group
Flower Mandalas Project group
Cultivating Creativity group

Request the 15 Flower Mandalas screensaver: Fifteen Flower Mandalas

© 2009, David J. Bookbinder

Saturday November 22, 2008

Flower Mandala: Water Lily X

Water Lily X Discussion: Art, Healing, and Transformation group Flower Mandalas Project group Cultivating Creativity group Request the 15 Flower Mandalas screensaver: Fifteen Flower Mandalas © 2008, David J. Bookbinder...

Sunday November 16, 2008

Flower Mandalas: Simplicity in Complexity

Dying Amaryllis I Dying Amaryllis III Dying Amaryllis VI Discussion: Art, Healing, and Transformation group Flower Mandalas Project group Cultivating Creativity group Request the 15 Flower Mandalas screensaver: Fifteen Flower Mandalas © 2008, David J. Bookbinder...

Saturday November 8, 2008

Spiritual Questing, Near-Death Experiences, and the Global Village

Sun Wheel I mandala In some ways my experience of the heart of Beliefnet has been tangential. Focused mainly on art and healing, I have paid less than full attention to the remarkable phenomonen of Beliefnet itself and it's...

Monday October 27, 2008

Flower Mandala: California Poppy

California Poppy I Discussion: Art, Healing, and Transformation group Flower Mandalas Project group Cultivating Creativity group Request a 15 Flower Mandalas screensaver: Fifteen Flower Mandalas © 2008, David J. Bookbinder...

Saturday October 11, 2008

Categories: Art, Flower Mandalas, Mandalas

Flower Mandala: Gazania III

Gazania III Discussion: Art, Healing, and Transformation group Flower Mandalas Project group Cultivating Creativity group Request a 15 Flower Mandalas screensaver: Fifteen Flower Mandalas © 2008, David J. Bookbinder...

Monday October 6, 2008

Categories: Art, Flower Mandalas, Mandalas

Flower Mandala: Yellow Daylily II

Yellow Daylily II Discussion: Art, Healing, and Transformation group Flower Mandalas Project group Cultivating Creativity group Request a flower mandala screensaver: Fifteen Flower Mandalas © 2008, David J. Bookbinder...

Thursday September 18, 2008

Flower Mandalas: Yellow Rose (and garbage)

Yellow Rose I Defiled or immaculate. Dirty or pure. These are concepts we form in our mind. A beautiful rose we have just cut and placed in our vase is pure. It smells so good, so fresh. A garbage...

Sunday September 7, 2008

Flower Mandala: Protection

Pink Peony I On life's journey, faith is nourishment, virtuous deeds are a shelter, wisdom is the light by day and right mindfulness is the protection by night. If a man lives a pure life, nothing can destroy him....

Friday August 8, 2008

Flower Mandala: Doronicum Orientale

Doronicum Orientale I Discussion: Art, Healing, and Transformation group Flower Mandalas Project group Cultivating Creativity group Request a flower mandala screensaver: Fifteen Flower Mandalas © 2008, David J. Bookbinder...

Sunday August 3, 2008

Living in the Right Side of the Brain

Dying Pansy I Neuroanatomist Jill Bolte Taylor had an opportunity few of us would wish for: a massive stroke. What she learned from it about the right and left brains seems relevant to all of us, and I'm passing...

Saturday July 26, 2008

Categories: Art, Flower Mandalas, Mandalas

Flower Mandala: Galliardia 'Arizona Sun'

Galliardia 'Arizona Sun' Discussion: Art, Healing, and Transformation group Flower Mandalas Project group Cultivating Creativity group Request a flower mandala screensaver: Fifteen Flower Mandalas © 2008, David J. Bookbinder...

Wednesday July 23, 2008

Flower Mandala: Dying Amaryllis VII

Dying Amaryllis VII Discussion: Art, Healing, and Transformation group Flower Mandalas Project group Cultivating Creativity group Request a flower mandala screensaver: Fifteen Flower Mandalas © 2008, David J. Bookbinder...

Saturday July 19, 2008

Categories: Art, Flower Mandalas, Mandalas

Flower Mandala: Blue Pansy I

Blue Pansy I Discussion: Art, Healing, and Transformation group Flower Mandalas Project group Cultivating Creativity group Request a flower mandala screensaver: Fifteen Flower Mandalas © 2008, David J. Bookbinder...

Thursday July 17, 2008

Flower Mandala: Beach Rose II

Beach Rose II Discussion: Art, Healing, and Transformation group Flower Mandalas Project group Cultivating Creativity group Request a flower mandala screensaver: Fifteen Flower Mandalas © 2008, David J. Bookbinder...

Tuesday July 15, 2008

Categories: Art, Flower Mandalas

Flower Mandala: Bachelor's Button III

Bachelor's Button III Discussion: Art, Healing, and Transformation group Flower Mandalas Project group Cultivating Creativity group Request a flower mandala screensaver: Fifteen Flower Mandalas © 2008, David J. Bookbinder...

Thursday June 19, 2008

Flower Mandala: Opening

Pink Dahlia I Opening: n. The act or an instance of becoming open or being made to open. An open space serving as a passage or gap. A breach or aperture. A clearing in the woods. The first part...

Sunday June 8, 2008

Trust

Pale Pink Tulip II Among my other activities, I run a writing group for people with addiction issues, past or present. I call it "Memoirs of Addiction and Recovery." We usually begin with a freewriting exercise, and either I...

Friday May 30, 2008

Categories: Art, Flower Mandalas, Mandalas

For Boston-area readers: Two-Person Show and Talk

Flower Mandalas at the Griffin Museum of Photography Boston-area readers interested in seeing my work in person are invited to go to the Griffin Museum of Photography in Winchester, Massachusetts. I will be part of a two-person show held...

Tuesday May 13, 2008

How Movies Saved My Life

Red Daylily My first movie was The Wizard of Oz. I was three years old, we came late to the theater, and we sat in the front row, all the way to the left. I had never seen moving...

Monday May 12, 2008

Flower Mandala: Balance

Chinese Tree Peony Seed Pod There are as many nights as days, and the one is just as long as the other in the year's course. Even a happy life cannot be without a measure of darkness, and the...

Sunday May 4, 2008

Flower Mandala: Celebration

Sunflower 'Moulin Rouge' You have been telling the people that this is the Eleventh Hour. Now you must go back and tell the people that this is the Hour. And there are things to be considered: Where are you...

Sunday April 27, 2008

Flower Mandala: Rosa 'Belle Poitevine'

Rosa 'Belle Poitevine' Click here for color image A photograph is a secret about a secret. The more it tells you, the less you know. - Diane Arbus Discussion: Art, Healing, and Transformation group Flower Mandalas Project group Cultivating...

Wednesday April 23, 2008

Flower Mandala: Nasturtium

Nasturtium I If we could see the miracle of a single flower clearly, our whole life would change. - Buddha Discussion: Art, Healing, and Transformation group Flower Mandalas Project group Cultivating Creativity group Request a flower mandala screensaver: Fifteen...

Saturday April 12, 2008

Flower Mandalas: Hope is the thing with feathers...

Morning Glory "Hope" is the thing with feathers – That perches in the soul – And sings the tune without the words – And never stops – at all – And sweetest – in the Gale – is heard...

Sunday March 16, 2008

Cultivating Creativity -- New Group Announcement!

Beach Rose III I've created a new group designed to foster creativity in your lives and I'm inviting you to join, and to ask you to invite anyone you know who may be interested in enhancing the creative parts...

Friday March 14, 2008

Shades of Gray: Addendum

Rhododendron 'Ponticum Roseum II' Click here to pop up the original full-color image An Addendum to 'Black and White Thinking' in Shades of Gray By 'shades of gray,' in my previous post, I'm thinking like a black-and-white photographer, whose...

Sunday March 9, 2008

'Black and White Thinking' in Shades of Gray

Pink Hibiscus II (sepia) Click here to pop up the original Pink Hibiscus II I've been experimenting with applying old photographic techniques to new, digitally created images and am curious to know how they compare, from your points of...

Tuesday March 4, 2008

Artistic Processes Wanted: A Call to Artists

Crocus II Several members of the Art, Healing, and Transformation group have expressed interest in the artistic process, as described by the artists themselves. So, this is a call to all you artists of all persuasions out there (you...

Wednesday February 27, 2008

The 'Meaning' of Fifteen Flower Mandalas

Fifteen Flower Mandalas I'd like to take this space to thank those of you who have downloaded my free Fifteen Flower Mandalas screensaver, and particularly those who have written back. The responses so far have been interesting. Until now,...

Monday February 18, 2008

Fifteen Flower Mandalas: A Re-Birthday Screensaver

Fifteen Flower Mandalas Fifteen years ago this Thursday, I nearly bled to death in an Albany, NY, hospital. During that event, I had a near-death experience which set me on my current spiritual and artistic path. In commemoration of...

Thursday February 14, 2008

Flower Mandala: Orange Zinnia I valentine

Orange Zinnia I Happy Valentine's Day to all my readers, and thanks for helping build a community around art, healing, and transformation. More anon, - David Discussion: Art, Healing, and Transformation group Flower Mandalas Project group © 2008, David...

Tuesday February 12, 2008

Categories: Art, Flower Mandalas, Mandalas

Flower Mandala: Beach Rose I

Beach Rose I flower mandala More anon, - David Discussion: Art, Healing, and Transformation group Flower Mandalas Project group © 2008, David J. Bookbinder...

Sunday January 27, 2008

Pink Fall Rose I and Cynthia Lee

Pink Fall Rose I Rose Wearing Ragged Rose wearing ragged round the edges, your petals dingy, brown mottled and pocked, do not grieve your lost beauty and perfection for truly your sullied shell your outer ring of decay and...

Tuesday January 22, 2008

Categories: Art, Flower Mandalas, Mandalas

White Lily III, the Diatonic Scale, and Artistic Collaboration

White Lily III A year ago, an online magazine called Science Creative Quarterly, physically located at the University of British Columbia, ran a contest using 12 of my flower mandala images, one for each month of the new year....

Friday January 11, 2008

Iris Germanica I (and another invitation)

Above is the Iris Germanica I flower mandala (which I'd love to have your comments on, either here or in the Flower Mandalas Project group). Here is the invitation: Although the Beliefnet.com home page calls me an "expert," I'm...

Sunday January 6, 2008

The Flower Mandalas Project

For the past six years, I've been taking pictures of flowers and manipulating the images to form mandalas. I'd like to assemble these images into a book, and I'd like your help. On a semi-regular basis, I'd like to...

Saturday December 22, 2007

Mandalas and Sacred Geometry: A Conversation with Vandorn Hinnant

This is an announcement of the first of what I hope will be a series of online discussions/interviews with people involved in art and transformation. Vandorn Hinnant is a visual artist currently living in Greensboro, North Carolina. His artwork...

Sunday December 16, 2007

Flower Mandalas, Time Travel, and Self-Healing

You yourself, as much as anyone in the entire universe, deserve your love and affections. - Buddha I am large, I contain multitudes. - Walt Whitman My work with mandalas has been, in itself, helpful in activating an inner...

Tuesday December 11, 2007

Self-Transformation and the Hero's Journey

What does not change is the will to change. - Charles Olson Joseph Campbell's book The Hero With a Thousand Faces describes the archetypal hero's journey. In it, Campbell distills the wisdom of a collection of myths, folktales, and...

Saturday December 8, 2007

Flower Mandalas: Self-Communion

Your vision will become clear only when you look into your heart. Who looks outside, dreams. Who looks inside, awakens. -Carl Jung I began the Flower Mandalas project in the midst of a long illness. Initially it was a...

Sunday December 2, 2007

Flower Mandalas: My story

I am a psychotherapist, photographer/digital artist, and writer. I was born in Buffalo, New York, in 1951. I started photographing in high school where, as yearbook editor, I took most of the candid and "art" pictures. After college, I...

Advertisement

Search This Blog

feed icon Subscribe

RSS Feed

Receive updates from Flower Mandalas

About Flower Mandalas

Welcome to the Flower Mandalas blog!

I am a psychotherapist, photographer, digital artist, and writer living near Boston, Massachusetts. As a therapist, I work primarily with artists, children and families, and people with addictive behaviors. Like Carl Jung, one of the fathers of modern psychology, I believe art can be a pathway to the essential Self and foster personal and global transformation.

More about the Flower Mandalas blog

Thanks for listening and sharing.
- David
David J. Bookbinder, LMHC

Go to:

Advertisement

Advertisement


About Beliefnet

Our mission is to help people like you find, and walk, a spiritual path that will bring comfort, hope, clarity, strength, and happiness. More about Beliefnet.

Legal

Copyright © Beliefnet, Inc. and/or its licensors. All rights reserved. Use of this site is subject to Terms of Service and to our Privacy Policy. Constructed by Beliefnet.

Advertisement

Report as Inappropriate

You are reporting this content because it violates the Terms of Service.

All reported content is logged for investigation.