My adventure into online courses began a few years back when I got crystal clear on my strengths, passions, and purpose.
I realized that EVERYTHING I've done in my life so far has prepared me to combine my love of art-making, process, self-discovery, and inspired living into teaching creativity courses.
But I’m getting ahead of myself here. Let me rewind to give you a better picture.

Finding my own way.
A quick flashback takes us to my mid-twenties when I was exploring a whole rainbow of creative opportunities. Working as an interior designer led to making theater props. That in turn, led to painting full-time. Followed by making wood sculptures and wood automata. Then sewing got the best of me and I made soft sculptures and fabric dolls. When my studio space got smaller, I focused more on watercolor drawings and writing.
There have also been monster puppets, paper theaters, murals, installations, scrolls, and boxes. Twenty-plus years is a long time.
There was no order to any of this. No strategy behind it. It was more about overlapping projects, involving a lot of experimentation. Working on one project would always lead to the next.
And I know, from the outside, it looks like I’ve never been able to make up my mind about what medium to work in.
But this could NOT be further from the truth. My mind has always been very much made up.
With every project, I’ve been following my joy.
It just so happens that my joy comes from working in many different mediums.
What’s more, I live to learn! I’m extremely process-driven and choose my projects based on what I wanna learn. In other words, I make my art to learn.
Yep, now I can look back and see how my art, products, and courses serve as proof of a life devoted to creative exploration. Ultimately, at the heart of my journey is the practice of showing up for myself.

The side jobs I’ve loved (and loved to hate).
To find my place in the world, I did a lot of weird stuff. Sometimes the work lasted only a day like wrapping Christmas presents. Sometimes I did the work on the weekends like waiting tables. I didn’t always like it, but it gave me the income that supported my dream to make art. And now looking back, I can see that it taught me to trust myself.
Namely, I learned that my desire to make art would not lead me straight off a cliff. Keep in mind that leaving a well-paying job like interior design to make art never seemed like a very good idea to anyone but me.
With every side job, I’ve been building my confidence.
Side jobs I’ve had:
- waiting tables
- wrapping Christmas presents
- making table decorations for events
- making candles
- making theater props
- organizing libraries
- painting murals
- teaching German
- teaching English
- teaching art
The yearning to keep on learning.
I can only explain my hunger to keep experimenting with different kinds of art projects as a deep yearning to keep learning.
Because let’s face it, the other choice I could have made is to become an EXPERT in one kind of art-making. I mean. it’s sooooo much easier to show up in the world saying, THIS is what I do. Instead of saying, THIS is what I do. AND this. AND this. AND this. AND this.
But forever true to who I am, I’ve spent over 20 years learning how to use software to create and run my projects.
With every new skill, I’ve been growing my toolbox.
In a nutshell, I’ve been messing around with making videos and audios for years. And then came book-making. Then I figured out how to have an online shop. And this meant learning how to create products that can be printed on demand (POD) to sell in my shop. Even sending out a weekly newsletter and keeping a blog are skills I’m still honing.

The teaching creativity.
Okay so, I wanna be totally honest here. None of my experimentation nor learning has brought me consistent income. Yikes.
And I'm sure it looks like I’ve never been able to figure out what I’m doing with my life.
I mean, I know I’m following my joy. But my biggest fear is that somehow, in spite of my eternal optimism, I'm managing to wreck my life.
Ya see being a rebel comes naturally to me. It’s practically impossible for me to not let my desires guide me through life. But it’s an entirely different thing to own my desires. Because that requires huge leaps of faith.
When I finally owned up to teaching creativity as my purpose, I had a revelatory matrix-style experience. No lie.
I could see that what I’ve been doing all these years has not been wrecking my life. Au contraire. I’ve been preparing myself.
With every leap of faith, I’ve been preparing myself.
Lo and behold I need to know all about making audios, videos, demos, worksheets, eBooks, and all kinds of software to put together an online course. Yep, it’s been illuminating.
Over 25 years of making art and 13 years of teaching kids have gone by. I’m a teacher, damn it.
And this teaching creativity thing is my biggest dream ever. Oh, yeah.
“My mission in life is not merely to survive, but to thrive; and to do so with some passion, some compassion, some humor, and some style.”
- Maya Angelou
Here’s something for you to check out:
If your creative projects are piling up while perfectionism keeps you stuck always trying harder, I get it.
Maybe you have plenty of free time after work and on weekends, but zero bandwidth to do anything that really matters to you, like your art. Your perfectionism has you convinced that all you need is more discipline. Go to the gym every day. Read more self-help books. Push through. Try harder.
If that's you, know this:
You don’t have to put your joy on hold anymore.
Get on my mailing list and grab the free Permission To Play Training:
This is a short, fun training (less than an hour!) where I'll guide you through my own 6-step framework for getting my butt unstuck through play.
Think of me as your personal trainer for getting your creative mojo back on track.
In this training, you'll be scribbling, doodling, making marks, and having fun with your art supplies. No fancy skills required. Just you, some markers or crayons, and a willingness to play.
What you'll take away:
• The satisfaction of giving yourself the gift of spending time on yourself
• The joy of having fun with your creative side
• A simple framework you can use anytime you need to jumpstart your momentum