Monday, November 23, 2020

Writing My Story

 (Recapitulate as I remember it- is to write your story including anything you can remember that ever happened to you- according to the shamanic tradition which Carlos Castenada was trained under.)

Writing my memoir was the most difficult work of art I have ever embarked on. Not because the writing was so hard but because through the process, I had to relive everything that I had experienced. 

The actual act of writing my story first came from a lesson in shamanism called recapitulation, about processing your experiences. I got it from the Naguals tradition of Mexico. For this exercise the apprentice shaman was supposed to write down everything that they could possibly remember ever happening to them. Through this exercise you could retrieve energy that you had left behind in the experience and leave behind energy that you had brought with you from the experience. It was a way of healing and creating a deep clearing in the shamanic apprentice.

I had known since I was a young adult that I would write my story one day but now I also knew that I could not write it until I did this practice of remembering. So that is where I started. I wanted to see what this process could do to help me evolve on my spiritual path. It took me ten years to do it because it was indeed very difficult to relive painful events. I could write for hours about the beautiful things but then when I got to a hard part, I might put it down for months or years, before I felt comfortable enough to continue writing. 

At one point, while writing some of the hardest parts of my life, I was lucky enough to be in the Virgin Islands. I was there volunteering for five weeks with sea turtles. I had made it a priority to continue the exercise while I was there. I found that each time I wrote something super intense from my past, I could get into the ocean and will the pain or sadness to wash away with the current. It was a powerful exercise. An incredible reminder that water is an ally and healer. 

For this exercise however, I did not write all the way to the end of my life. I felt I was still processing the later part and it had taken ten years just to write everything I remembered to my thirties. I was satisfied with the work I had done for the time. (I am determined to start again sometime later in life.)  

After doing that, I knew that soon I would write it again, for others to read. I did not know how or when but I knew I would. I did not push myself, I just waited. It took a couple of years and then one day something said, “It’s time to write your story.” So, I opened my computer and began to write, starting from when I was born. I had thought I might use my notes from the recapitulation exercise but I did not need to. It came naturally.

When I sat down to write the memoir, it just flowed through me. And once I started, I could not stop. For the first two weeks, it was all that I did. I woke up and wrote until I went to sleep again, sometimes for twelve hours straight. It took four weeks to finish that first draft. In a way, the first draft was pretty easy because I think I actually channeled it. 

Then the hard part came. I had to edit it, which meant rewriting and rewriting which also meant reliving it over and over again. This was as hard as the recapitulation exercise because I really had to dig deep to express my feelings behind each event rather than just recording it from memory.  

And this was a different story anyway, the parts I felt safe to share. Though some of those parts took me a couple of years to really feel okay to share. Then my aunt gave me the best possible insight saying, “Your past does not define you.”

That was almost three years ago and now my story is done and ready to publish. I am currently seeking a literary agent. (You can view my query on my new website at Visions and Reflections). It’s is only the first half of my life. Another book is in the works. 

Whatever it’s taken to write this book, I know that I have learned more about myself than I ever thought I would. It’s been an unexpected gift to myself.

Thoughts on My Career as a Body Painter

        Do you know what I first loved most about body art? It is that it is so “uncivilized”. You would never see someone in the so-called civilized world in body paint unless they are on a stage or in a photo shoot. Yet indigenous people have been wearing body art for eons. This is what first drew me to it. It’s timeless and utterly raw art form. 

    Body art is also one of the few temporary art forms I know of. Tibetan sand mandalas or art in nature are also in this category. All of these art forms, despite being temporary, have a powerful presence in the few moments that they exist. 

When I was in my twenties, I developed this primal desire to create art for the skin. I especially loved creating characters through my body painting. Seeing the model transform into a different personality still amazes me. I never know what to expect because each person I work with is so different when I finish from when I begin to paint them. 

When I started, I loved it so much that I found a way to make a living at it. At that time, being a body artist was not a career option unless you did permanent tattoos. Yet, I knew there was a need for it and I was intent on finding my market. I did that and now I have been a professional henna artist and body painter for twenty-two years. At times I have been more successful at it than I ever thought possible. 



(Images from my last create costume and body art shoot. All feathers are cruelty-free/ naturally molted)

 November 2019

Photographer: David Hobbs, 

Model: Katie Baker 

Costume/ Body Artist: Rosemary Kimble






But here is the thing. I love body painting but I hate the sexualization of body painted women in our society. While I can always see it as art, so many other people look at my models as sex objects. I have to admit, I have really been struggling with wanting to continue body painting the last couple of years because of this. 

And these days I mostly only enjoy it when I get to choose my own design. After twenty plus years, I have frankly become a bit bored with it too. Regardless, I have been a part of so many amazing projects with this artform that I know I will never completely let it go. I still have so many ideas to execute with body painting.

But if you know me you probably noticed even before the pandemic put us in quarantine, that I have been producing very little body art in the past couple of years. I have secretly been working on a career change for the past few years and I have a few things that I have been focusing on, photography, animal communication and writing. I am not sure how I will make a living doing this yet but I know I have been here before and found a way to succeed. So for now, I am just setting my intentions on the end goal, just like I did with my first career as a costume and body artist, and we will see where it takes me. After all everything is temporary, right?

(I wrote this just before the pandemic. Since then I have started the new business Visions and Reflections and have a new website. )