enJOY it

an archived personal and craft blog from Elise Blaha Cripe.

  • Divedeep

    I heard a lot of great stuff at WDS, but one of my favorite bits came from author Scott Berkun. He spoke about the "inspiring story cycle" (though I am not sure that's exactly what he called it) and about how we look for the feel-good story or the inspirational message before we get motivated to sit down to work. And when we do sit down, we feel like the work doesn't "feel-good" or seem "inspirational" and so we figure it's time to hear another story. It can go on and on.

    Scott nailed the point home and talked about how when you're sitting at your desk and you find yourself thinking "this isn't fun," that's when you really start working. That's when you're finally writing your own inspiring story.

    I found myself nodding along. I have totally done this. I have spent a lot of time consuming instead of creating. Browsing other peoples' blogs. Looking at other peoples' images. Reading other peoples' stories. I have found myself valuing the already completed work of others more than the in-progress work of my own.

    We all contribute. No matter what you're doing: getting an education, raising kids, handing insurance claims, writing books, trying cases, building bridges, making sense of spreadsheets, teaching students, growing veggies, managing financial operations, building wells in Africa, you're contributing.

    And we all consume. All day, everyday, we consume. There is nothing wrong with taking in information. There's nothing wrong with fist-pumping at someone else's inspiring story. Or tearing up over someone else's breakthough. It's part of the process and certainly not a bad thing.

    But the trick when you're trying to do something different, is to pay attention to the ratio. Am I spending three hours looking at other peoples' work and only one hour on my own? Can I flip that equation? Three hours for me, just one hour for others?

    When it's time to crank something out, I have learned (through practice) that "work" happens in my own head. Work is not something that comes to me. Lightning doesn't strike. The lightbulb doesn't go off. I go to the work. I chase the lightning down. And I flip the lights on and off until they stay lit.

    If you're struggling to get your own shop going or your own blog running or your own business idea off the ground, reading about other people stories is only inspiring to a point. Eventually you have to turn it off and sit at a desk and hammer it out. You have to embrace that not as enjoyable part because that's the part when it's actually happening.

    The best example I can think of is writing. We hear all the time that if you want to be a good writer you have to read a lot. (I totally think this is true.) Reading provides access to new ideas. It helps you figure out what you like and don't like. It can help you narrow in a bit on your own style.

    But you know what really makes a good writer? Someone who writes.

    I love NaNoWriMo, November's National Novel Writing Month. The goal is to write 50,000 words in one month. So, basically to write a book in 30 days. The non-profit organization exists to help turn people (nearly 600,000 last year) into novelists by encouraging them to, you guessed it, write.

    It's not easy. The more you read during that month the less you're writing. The more you're worried about everyone else the less you're writing. The more you're caught up in your own fear, the less you're writing. The more you're thinking "hmmm, this doesn't feel fun," the less you're writing.

    There is really only one way to write 50,000 words in one month: Write them.

    You want to make stuff? Make it. You want to write stuff? Write it. You want to do something different? Do it. Get in and be inspired, but then GET OUT. And then get to work.

    Since writing this post, I created Get To Work Book! It's a day planner + goal setting workbook that is designed to help you take your big goals turn them into something real. Learn more and shop the brand here.

    Other posts you might enjoy:

     

  • TeeOff

    My quest for the perfect tee-shirt is never-ending, you guys. Pickwick & Weller closed this spring and that was a bummer because I loved their tees. In an attempt to see what's my current fave, I pulled six from my closet and photographed each of them in the exact same setting. This was a REALLY good idea because I got to see wow, that's a fail, or WOW that's win. Nothing like photos to put things into perspective.

    These six tees are ones that I have had for at least two months and have found myself reaching for. All have been washed and dried many times. (None have been ironed since I have no time for that.) All are in neutral colors because I have realized I am so much more comfortable in white and grey than in brights.

    Below are my notes for each shirt going from top to bottom and left to right. As I am sure you've guessed, links are affiliate.

    Old Navy Slub Knit Crew Pocket Tee $6 (60% cotton, 40% Modal®.) | SIX DOLLARS. These are the sort of prices that trick you into buying 14 in every color. It was PERFECT the first time I wore it but it shrunk in the wash a bit and now it's just too short and a little too boxy to be something I want to wear all the time.

    Madewell SkarGorn #44 Tee $40 (100% cotton) | This was my attempt to see if an expensive tee was "better." Nope. It didn't hold up well in the wash and it's just not right.

    Everlane the Cotton V $15 (100% Supima Cotton) | Getting there. I like this tee and all the shirts I have purchased from Everlane. This has been washed 10+ times and still has that slouchy fit that I like. Plus, great price and made in the USA.

    Madewell Slub V-neck $30 (100% cotton) | Super winner. I have this in white too and love the fit and pocket detail. Holds up really well in the wash and stays soft. I also like the sleeve legth.

    Topshop V-Neck Tee $20 (100% viscose rayon) | Another winner. It's not cotton but it's flattering and feels great. The washing instructions say to dry flat, but I tumble dry it and haven't noticed a major fit difference. I am a BIG fan of this one and feel of all of them this tee could be "dressed up" successfully.

    American Apparel Unisex Tri-Blend V-neck $24 (50% Polyester / 25% Cotton / 25% Rayon) | This used to be my tee of choice. It's been washed no less than 75 times since I bought it four years ago. I love that it never wrinkles, doesn't shrink and the grey is perfect. I think my biggest issue now is I wish it was bigger (see how it just fit's too tight? You can see the waistband of my shorts). I should size up.

    Lesson learned? Stop buying tees. BUT, when I do need one again, at least I know where to start. I don't care what a tee looks like off the rack. I care what it looks like out of the dryer. It's so interesting to compare them side-by-side.

    Any favorite brands I am missing? I'd love to hear.

  • Weekend28

    As part of my word WHOLE this year, I want celebrate the work of others by sharing links to my friends, possible friends and complete strangers who are doing great things on the Internet. This is some of the rad stuff I recently saw online…

    let's all move to Germany.

    interesting interview about building a capsule wardrobe each season.

    LOVED this article about how a password (aka bold statement) can change your life.

    this recipe might get me out of my baking slump.

    just bought these shoes for an outdoor wedding and I hope they're cute IRL.

    and how sweet is this personalized wedding gift?

    bold predictions for 2025.

    inspiration for my next weaving, maybe?

    DIY triangle dream catchers.

  • Here3 Here2 Here4 IMG_2833 IMG_2930 IMG_2934 IMG_2923

    Hey, long time no word dump.

    What a crazy July. Work hard (WDS), play hard (also WDS and a bachelorette party in Austin). Compared to that, August is going to be a breeze (unless an opportunity I cannot say no to is planning to fall from the sky).

    Thank you for your kind words these last few weeks on the WDS speaking posts. It's been really fun to share. Many of you (like my parents) have been asking if a recording of the talk will be online and yes, it will for sure. But I heard it might be awhile. When it's up I will be sure to share a link.

    And thanks for a great July MAKE29 launch. I am so happy to see the dive deep prints be well received and headed out into the world. I'm halfway through this project and very inspired about what's still to come. I have been working hard on a lot more MAKING for the second half of the year. It's time consuming, but awesome. I am also hoping to get a MAKE29 "print pack" listed in the shop soon (there is a peek in the photos above) for those of you that missed a month or are just interested in some smaller pieces.

    Today we're headed to…

    Just kidding. This weekend we're sitting still. Paul is working tomorrow but has Sunday off. I might take a nap. I'm sure some grilling will occur. I have a few tomatoes that need to be picked. I've got a fitbit that won't walk itself. My baby girl is at the perfect age for hugs, kisses and jungle animal impressions.

    Looking good, weekend. Looking excellent, coming soon month of August. Let's roll.

  • EandeJULY

    I will be documenting Ellerie's second year by photographing some mama and baby favorites each month.

    This is what Elise and Ellerie are doing in July 2014.

    JULYreading

    READING : The Creative Block | Dear Zoo

    JULYplaying

    PLAYING : with yarn | with her monkey

    JULYeating

    EATING : shaved zucchini salad (from the backyard!) | shredded cheese (by the handful)

    JULYwearing

    WEARING : madewell v-neck tees | Circo striped tees (from Target)

    JULYwatching

    WATCHING : Sherlock | a video of herself from last April on repeat

    ps : JUNE

    Dottedline

    This week on ELISE GETS CRAFTY, I'm chatting with Cathy Zielske about keeping it real online, something we both work to do. Subscribe on iTunes or stream the episode here.

  • Julybookreport

    Good news, I am now working on my book reports AS I READ. So I finish a book and word-dump my thoughts. Then after I have 3-5 books I'll hit publish. It's like real time but maybe better.

    The Fault in Our Stars by John Green | Oh jeez, guys. I LOVE HYPE. Like, I love it. I'll get on board with nearly anything that's hyped because I feel like I may as well try it. Best case, I'm obsessed too and can join the club, and worst case, I have an actual reason to dismiss the hype. #winwin. Needless to say, I was so excited for this book but after finishing it can't get on board with, nor totally dismiss the hype. It was sad, obviously, but interesting and I loved that it didn't take itself so seriously. But it also suffered dramatically from Dawson's Creek syndrome. As in: who talks like that? I don't know. I liked the characters but for some reason I shed just one tear and that wasn't even about the romance – it was the about the parents (maybe I'm too old?). Feel free to call me crazy. I myself googled "Am I a robot?" after I finished.

    The Cockoo's Calling by Robert Galibrath | This was written by JK Rowling under a pen-name and then the pen-name got out and now we all know it's her. While I am bummed there was not even one mention of Hogwarts, I actually liked this. It's a mystery that follows a craggy detective and I found the characters to be interesting and the story strong. I didn't know whodoneit until it was revealed and I was pleased with how it all came together. But it took ages to read. Like three weeks, which for me and a book feels like forever. It wasn't that it was boring or slow, it just felt denser than it needed to be.

    The Interestings by Meg Wolitzer | I enjoyed this a lot though I would say the overall theme is somewhat depressing. I tend to enjoy novels where the story-telling is done through multiple characters (although I didn't love ANY of the characters!). I appreciated how much time it spanned and how she shared what happened over so many decades. It was like a coming of age tale that actually showed the aging. Interesting and well done.

    Drop Dead Healthy by AJ Jacobs | I am a BIG Jacobs fan. I read My Year of Living Biblically a few years ago and then The Know-It-All shortly after that. His style is my style of writing. This is the sort of stuff I enjoy reading and the sort of stuff I try to write. I love the smart, mildly self-deprecating sidenotes. I love how a story is told through a collection of facts. I love that I finish the books and feel like I laughed AND I learned something (or a lot of somethings). My favorite scene was the caveman workout where he describes the relationship between Vlad and John. THAT'S FUNNY. (Obviously I loved the part about how the fitbit makes him appreciate doing chores as well.) The social commentary, especially around something like health and fitness, is spot on. Full disclosure, I met AJ at WDS and he was incredibly kind, smart and yes, funny.

    *links are affiliate

    ps : friendly reminder that the copper dive deep prints will go on sale here at 1pm PST today.

  • WDS4

    photo credit : Armosa Studios for WDS.

    here's part one & part two.

    I did something interesting when I started working on this speech.

    I wrote it all out. Blog post style. It's 3778 words and lives in a google doc. I would walk to the grocery store and speak into my iPhone headphone microphone, recording my ideas in the AudioMemos app. And then I would get home and listen to them and transcribe them into text. And then I would edit the text into something like what I would share here on the blog.

    When my mom came to town in the middle of June, I read through the speech for the first time in front of someone with a larger vocabulary than my one-year-old, and we realized something catastrophic – it was well written. But good writing DOES NOT always translate into great speaking.

    (Insert sad trombone sound.)

    It was too wordy. Too many adjectives. Too many thoughts. Too many specific, HIT THIS SENTENCE EXACTLY THIS WAY OR THE WHOLE SHIP WILL GO DOWN phrases.

    It was a start, yes, but sort of a rough draft of a start. I debated just getting up there and sharing on screen a link to the google doc. And then standing still as people read through it on their phones. I'd wait until everyone had finished, bow a few times and then march off stage.

    (Not my best idea ever.)

    I recorded a short podcast episode (episode 014b) a few days later. I listened to the playback on that one which is something that I rarely do. I had made no notes for that episode. I just started talking. While I didn't hit all the things I wanted to hit, the main point got through because I TALKED IT OUT. When you speak and are trying to convey a message you simplify and you assume that people can't go back and "re-read" so you repeat yourself a bit more, generally in a GOOD way. You make your point stronger by solid repetition.

    I listened to myself on the podcast and I felt like that girl sounded confident. She was far from flawless, but she was comfortable with who she was and what she was saying. She believed her words.

    WDS3

    photo credit : Armosa Studios for WDS.

    I realized that I believed my words. My WDS speech is MY story. It's not a combination of facts or figures, it's just my life and work, organized a bit for clarity. To be truly authentic and effective, I had to start talking, not just reading.

    From June 22nd until July 14, I said my speech at least once I day. I stopped reading it immediately and I started just saying it. Over and over and over. (Fun fact, Paul did not hear the speech once until I gave it on stage.) Sometimes I would say something so perfect that I wanted to write it down. I wanted to memorize the exact phrasing, but I couldn't do that (except for the ending – that HAD to be delivered perfectly). I just had to hope that in the live show the right phrasing came out.

    I said it so many times that bits of it became like muscle memory. Some of it is verbatim from what I wrote originally because it became like tying your shoes. You don't think about trying your shoes, you just do it, the exact same way every time. But some of it was said totally new because every single run-through that I had was slightly different.

    It was imperative, I thought, that I got an early laugh. Laughter is my love language in that I LOVE to make people laugh. I wanted to do that. I wanted to get these people on my team and my method in any situation is to get the laugh. Not in a cheap way (I wasn't going to wear a clown nose) but in a way that made them realize, "this girl, who three minutes ago I was sure I had nothing in common with, is aware that humor wins."

    From the beginning (like day one), I scripted a joke about Chris not being my average reader. I picked the most randomly "girly" project – nail polish marbling – because of the context and because it's a graphically interesting photo. I had another joke shortly after about what people think when you tell them the title of the conference.

    And then throughout the day on Saturday, I collected jokes – relying heavily on AJ Jacobs' brilliant talk about how we are all related. I watched other speakers and paid attention to how they delivered the funny. The bad news about going on day two is you cannot relax, but the good news is that you have an entire DAY of shared experience to pull from. It's like getting a cheat sheet, but paying for the cheat sheet in buckets of sweat and nausea.

    Those last minute jokes, obviously, were not rehearsed. But humor is my default. It's easier for me to insert the joke than almost anything else because it's my go-to ice breaker. It's my defense mechanism. Some people curl up in a ball. I start throwing out quips like some sort of deranged wood chipper (not all are good, obviously).

    I ended up adding another story from the conference to the end of the speech because frankly, a real life (and real time!) example is like gold AND because I was so energized by the atmostphere at this event. THESE PEOPLE ARE MOVERS. THEY ARE DOERS. THEY ARE HELPERS. It was inspiring to witness and I felt like if I was able to demonstrate a concept and help promote someone else's story then I could be a part of this cool community. At 11:30pm I saw Steven's photo on IG and at midnight I was tossing and turning trying to figure out if I could make it work. I had Steven's info written on my arm (and then on a sheet of paper that was tucked into my sleeve) as I walked out on stage.

    I was going to wait and see if I felt in control enough of the situation to mention it. (Spoiler Alert.)

    to be continued (just one more installment)…

  • Weekend27

    As part of my word WHOLE this year, I want celebrate the work of others by sharing links to my friends, possible friends and complete strangers who are doing great things on the Internet. This is some of the rad stuff I recently saw online…

    for some reason, this super short wedding video made me want to cry (in a good way!).

    photo & type perfection.

    THIS is why that Beyonce quote drives me crazy.

    a cute dress.

    I have been using C1 on the VSCO photo app too and LOVED this post from Elsie about getting brighter and sharper iPhone photos.

    looking forward to seeing this movie.

    loved hearing about this 50 dates in 50 states adventure at WDS.

    re-discovered this song and am listening on repeat.

    congrats to Kal on the launch of her print shop!

    I'll be chiming in via google hangout on this free CreativeLive class "from App to Archive" on Wednesday between 3-4pm PST.

  • MAKE29blogjuly

    The sixth product in my MAKE29 adventure is now available for preview. Learn more about this product and the story behind it here. This edition of 290 will be available for purchase at 1PM PST on 07/22/14. Please note, while new products will always be released on the 22nd of the month, the time of release will vary. It will always be clearly noted with the product preview a few days in advance.

  • Fromwds4

    Do you want to know something HILAROUS?

    Greatnamaste

    On my July editorial calendar I had planned to post a WDS recap on Tuesday 7/15. I thought I would be able to sum it all up in a post. HA!

    Portland

    I'm in the middle of sharing the behind the scenes of actually speaking (hopefully the final two parts will be shared next week), but I wanted to post a few photos from our visit to Portland. I was too nervous to appreciate the great food, but I SO enjoyed walking around and taking in downtown Portland.

    Portland3

    What a rad town. Sure, we were there in the summer. Sure it was warm and sunny (except for the random Sunday afternoon thunderstorm). I get that it's not always like that. But still, amazing. Paul has a week off next February and I'm already planning a family trip so we can go back when it's raining and see if we're still in love.

    Fromwds5

    I am SO GLAD that Paul was able to come up on this adventure with me. Partly because it was just awesome to have my teammate nearby to provide support and some distraction. Partly because I needed him to hear my speech. And partly because there is NO WAY I could put the event into the proper words or context for him to understand. "You had to be there." is sort of the gist of the weekend.

    Portland2

    Paul was asked a few times what he did for a living and he responded by saying "I work for the man." Paul has a conventional job. About as conventional as it gets. And yet, he got a lot out of the whole thing. Much more, he told me, than he expected. #rad

    Portland4

    When I got asked to speak, I asked Chris "Who goes to this? Who are these people?" I don't even remember his response but I know it was something like "people who are looking for something different." You can't categorize this group in any other way because it's such a vast array of backgrounds, ages, experiences, career paths and stories. The mission of WDS is to answer this question, "How do we live a remarkable life in a conventional world?"

    Fromwds14

    And in so many ways, the event did that.

    photos were taken with my iPhone5 and edited with the VSCO app.