Scrappin’ With Sue

My ”oldest” friend (since we were three), Sue, came out west this week and we had fun visiting and scrapbooking. Our theme this year was elementary school in the 50′s.

Ah yes…those were the days…

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 “Creating Your Personal Legacy” Class

My new class is ready to go! If you live in the Sedona, AZ area, register with OLLI for the April 11th start-date.

Remember the times of your life with scrap book
Written by Lu Stitt   
Friday, 25 March 2011 00:00
Village of Oak Creek resident Sunny Schlenger displays some of her creative scrapbooks at her home Friday, March 18. Schlenger teaches a class with Yavapai College Osher Lifelong Learning Institute teaching ways to preserve memorabilia through scrapbooking.

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Tom Hood/Larson Newspapers

Preserving memories is something everyone wants to do — to keep those bits and pieces of a life well lived preserved for coming generations. If that is true, then why do most of us just toss the items in a box and stick it under the bed or in the back of the closet? “Oftentimes, people just don’t know how best to put those items together in some type of organization,” Sunny Schlenger said. “There are many ways to create your personal legacy.”

Schlenger teaches a class through Yavapai College’s Osher Lifelong Learning Institute to help people create and preserve their life story using the memorabilia, photographs and writings they’ve kept piled together in a box. The first step, she said, is organizing.

“It doesn’t have to be done all at once. You can even start with one photograph and write a description about it and why it is important to you,” Schlenger said.

Schlenger has written two books on organization. After her parents died, she inherited a large number of pictures and collected items from several years of saving.

“Some [organizing skills] I knew and some I didn’t. I started scrapbooking about the same time and found I had to find things first, then organize them,” Schlenger said opening the book she made. “I decided I wouldn’t just pass along a box of unmarked ‘stuff’ to my kids.”

From that decided statement, Schlenger came up with an idea of how to put her life into a book, then the idea for a class began to surface to help others do the same.

“In my class you take one photograph and write about it, focusing on the positive. You ask questions of why and how this item is important. Include what memories and feelings are associated with the photograph and why. If we take it a step further, we can create pages from an era, like the 1960s or one year,” Schlenger said.

Other ideas for organization are by people, family or events. It can be very basic, like a photograph and information about the people pictured. This is done most often with very old photographs of an ancestor. Creating a personal legacy is not just about remembering the past. It’s paying attention to the present and passing the stories along.

“I want my kids to know what life was like for me on March 8, 2011. You can go from very general, like who is my family, to what I did yesterday,” Schlenger said.

She starts by asking the question, “If you were gone tomorrow, what would you want others to know about you and the life you lived?” She said it is like an African proverb she likes to quote: “When an elder dies, it is as if an entire library burned down.”

What Schlenger and the people in the class will do is keep it simple and specific to the individual. Every person’s life is different, even if the experiences are similar. Many people crossing the American plains and prairies in the 1800s to find a better life in the West bore some of the same hardships, but the journals they wrote were all different.

“History books were written from people’s writings, how they saw what was happening. We all have a history that is worth telling. It helps us to see our purpose in life — why we are here,” Schlenger said. “It also helps us revisit those most treasured moments of our lives.”

Creating a personal legacy can be like a treasure hunt to discover those bits and pieces, and why they have been kept as cherished possessions.

“It helps connect us to ourselves and to each other. You can approach this from any angle,” Schlenger said as she opened several books on a table to demonstrate the different approaches she has used with her own legacy project.

“It’s a lifelong process you can start at any age.”

She said virtually everyone who comes to the class walks in the door with a tub full of photographs and collected items, and wants to organize them somehow. “Where should I put this item?” is a big question for most people, Schlenger said.

“I want to help get people where they are and bring them into the perspective of their life as a story. I encourage people to write about their lives and having an item to write about helps,” she said. “I think this is part of my mission, to help people record their own lives.”

The class is also designed to help people understand what is important in their life, what is worth keeping, and how, with a deep breath, to blow the rest away.

“People need to record their lives, and not be just a name on a family tree or three paragraphs in a newspaper obituary. It’s a way to reclaim your life and have something to pass along,” Schlenger said.

Schlenger is the author of “How to Be Organized in Spite of Yourself” and “Organizing for the Spirit.” She received a bachelor’s degree in social and behavioral sciences from Johns Hopkins University and a master’s in counseling from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Schlenger has lived in the Village of Oak Creek since 2007.

Creating Your Personal Legacy will be taught for five weeks beginning Monday, April 11, from 10:45 a.m. to 12:15 p.m. in Room 39 of Yavapai College Sedona Campus, 4215 Arts Village Drive in West Sedona. For more information, call 649-4266.

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 Full Moon Dreamboard

This past weekend I participated in Jamie Ridler’s first Dreamboard Telecircle! Such a wonderful concept – joining people together around the world to share the experience of creating one’s own dreamboard. I love what I came up with, and plan to work with it more to continue to find out what I’m telling myself with my choice and arrangement of images.

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 Scrapping with Sue

My former next-door neighbor, my best ol’ buddy from the time we were 3 years old, came out to visit this week. We did a number of things together in Sedona but the highlight was scrapbooking. We both love the hobby, but more than that, we got to “play” together like we did when we were kids — finding pictures of the games we enjoyed for hours on end and the musical groups we loved back in the 50′s and 60′s. No, we weren’t putting clothes on the Lennon sisters paper dolls like we used to do, but we were sharing the fun of creating while we listened to the oldies and reminisced.

Long-time girlfriends — priceless.

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 The (New) Power of Nostalgia

nostalgia by amalia chimera.

photo credit amalia chimera

“Nostalgia, the researchers say, may provide an important link between our past and our present selves, providing us with a positive view of the past, which in turn can help us find a greater sense of continuity and meaning. As we age, it may acquire an even greater role in our lives, as it may help us to overcome feelings of loneliness and to cope with social isolation. Found in all cultures and among all age groups, nostalgia, the study notes, offers not only insights in psychology, emotion, the self and our relationships, but it is also emerging as a fundamental human strength. (Association for Psychological Science, December 2008)”

Monika Rice

Sometimes It’s Healthier to be in the Then

Spirituality & Health (Sept/Oct issue)

 

(Hat tip to Jamie for sending this!)

 

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 Remembering Laughter

remember-laughter

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

I read about the death of Bea Arthur today (“Maude”, The Golden Girls”) and it started me thinking about my dad who passed away six years ago next month. I located this scrapbook lay-out that I had done around a favorite picture of him with the kids and thought about the importance of laughter in my life. Many of my favorite memories have to do with laughing along with someone important to me. I don’t know why but the laughter seems to cement the memory. I miss hearing my father laugh.

And I will miss Bea Arthur, too. Thanks, Bea, for delivering so many memorable lines in your own inimitable style. R.I.P.

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 Bond. James Bond.

James Bond in "Thunderball"

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

A blast from the past. (Please excuse the flash; I was pretending that I had an old-style Instamatic camera.)

In Stacy’s Library of Memories class, we’re exploring how to use memorabilia in lay-outs, and I was delighted to be able to pull out this collection from the 60′s. Among the items are an article and pic from Life magazine, a clipping of a local movie theatre showing of “Thunderball”, and a bubble gum card picturing the character Pussy Galore flipping Sean Connery. Now where could you find that today?

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 How To Make Intentions That Stick

new year 'goals and intentions' kit by jess gonacha.

photo credit jess gonacha

I have a new class up at Big Picture Scrapbooking! It’s a Projects Now class (available as instant download) entitled “My New Year: How To Make Intentions That Stick”. You don’t need to be a scrapbooker to follow the guidelines for creating a special year for yourself any time that you’re ready.

I’m excited about this class for BPS, my first, because I believe so strongly that both life and scrapbooking are about The Big Picture and anytime we can connect to that, we’re going in the right direction. The class also contains my first on-line audio recordings and I’m proud of myself for learning my way around. Take a look and let me know what you think!

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 Some Things Never Change

 

Soulmates

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

To Crawl Or Not

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

I’m auditing Stacy’s Library of Memories Class over at Big Picture Scrapbooking and I’m loving it for the second year in a row. I’m still hampered by my pronator syndrome but it’s not keeping me from looking back and discovering wonderful connections in my photograph drawers and scrapbooking them.

These 2 lay-outs represent life-long trends for my daughter, Lauren. The first commemorates her relationship with her soulmate buddy, Ben. They’ve been good friends since birth and early on agreed to go to their senior prom together. As you can see, they did! The second lay-out shows Lauren’s learning-to-crawl dilemma: “To do or not to do…” which has represented her approach to decision-making all 25 years of her life. (She would have me say that she is getting better, though.)

I would highly recommend that you look through your own pix for some things in life that have never changed. It’s fun and can even be reassuring.

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 Envy Pure and Simple

Donna Downey is giving a sneak peek at her new fabric scrapbooking line. Fabric has never really been my friend, starting in junior high sewing class. But man do I love Donna’s paint colors and textures and embroidered canvas tags and quilted elements and the list goes on. Envy may not be strong enough a word…perhaps LUST? I don’t know other than I must get me some and then learn how to play with it.

Maybe old junior high school dogs can learn new tricks?

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