Ten things you should know about Vincent Van Gogh

This is a reflection written during a holiday to Europe in 2013
Today I went to the Van Gogh Museum.

My sausage legs have had enough of being wrapped up In tight jeans so they begged me to wear a dress despite the nippy weather and practicalities of riding a bike. The white sundress might have passed a normal girl’s fashion panel had I not strangled its femininity with my puffy black bomber jacket. I stretched myself and wore a tiny polly pocket handbag of rachael’s so i could pack a banana. It looks like a small khake cadet camp water bottle. I looked like a very confused version of Dora the explorer. Riding in my tired pink hush puppies was a tough ask given my recent introduction to road cycling. (Don’t tell dad- he’ll kill me for my flagrant disregard for practicality)

I ungracefully mounted my too-tall bike, balancing myself on my tippy toes, and cycled up to the lush green pasture near the entrance to the gallery. I rode by the little red awnings framing the windows in which the ladies in lingerie sit. I’m still intrigued by their casual patient presence in their respective fishbowls as people point and gawk. They fiddle on their phones and smile as they wait for some sad man to peer in and pick them. Then their curtains are drawn. The streets are decorated by the little vignettes of closed and open curtains. Like little figurines on the top of a cake, they’re perched on a chair behind glass – though these are a lot less picturesque, slightly dumpier, more variety, and certainly more expensive to purchase I suspect. I wonder if they’d rather be purely ornamental creations on the throne of a fluffy white ice cream cake..?

I mightn’t have ten hearty lessons from Vincent for you, but this is what I found:

– audio tapes are as brilliant as I remember, I had an uninterrupted narration of a brilliant man’s life. My generic lady breathed life into everything I saw, I couldn’t have done it without her.

– tying a jacket around my waist is just as handy as it was when I was ten at the Easter show

– Vincent cut part of his left ear lobe off after a fight with his friend Paul Gaugin

– he had a yellow house in the south of France and he wanted all his friends to come share his studio, but only his friend Paul turned up.

– Vincent didn’t decide he was going to be an Artist until he was 27. I feel reassured that my raison d’être remains unknown. Vincent and I had a quiet word and he whispered I can open my osteopathy clinic on the northern beaches in five years time after all.

-He was a self taught genius who painted spontaneously and paid little attention to what others thought.

– He believed in technical skill and hard work.

– He practiced endlessly

The saddest part of his story was despite clearly mastering his craft and creating an incredible body of work in a decade, he still felt like a failure and told his brother Theo this on the precipice of his death.

I had a nice day there. I was reminded of the power of self-study and the responsibility of nurturing our own skills.

I am aware that this conclusion sounded like a school reflection assignment after an excursion. I am ok with that, I am comfortable with my ongoing attachment to all things ‘school’.

 

Create your passion

Happiness is not a goal; it is a by-product.
Eleanor Roosevelt

 

1. Decide what you want.

Let’s face it, it’s impossible to create your ideal ‘dream life’ if you aren’t sure what it actually looks like. Many people have no idea. So before you do anything else, give yourself some empty time with a blank page to map out what a truly extraordinary life looks like for you – physically, financially, spiritually, emotionally, in your relationships, the work you do and the impact you make.  Creating a vision for the future you want provides a compass to guide you forward – what to steer toward and what to steer away from. As the old saying goes, if you don’t know where you’re going, you may end up someplace you don’t much like.

2. Know why you want it!

A clear sense of purpose will compel you into action and fuel your bravery to overcome any size obstacle.  So get crystal clear about why it is so important for you to pursue your vision for success and achieve your goals. What lies at stake if you don’t? If it’s not meaningful enough, you won’t stay the course when the going gets tough. When your why is about serving something bigger than your ego and need for significance, the more powerful you’ll be in achieving it and figuring out the hows. To quote Tony Robbins: “The more you use the gifts you have to serve others, the more you’ll get the gifts you want.”

3. Take action, massive action!

It’s easy to live with excuses and justifications about why you can’t do what you want, at least not now. Maybe later. But inaction exacts an increasingly steep toll on our lives. Nothing is a more powerful antidote to fear than action. Daily action. Massive action! Don’t wait to know everything before you do something. Start talking to people. Extend an invitation. Risk a rejection. Ask for an introduction. Introduce yourself to an influencer. Offer your services.  Get your finances in order. Ask for help. Learn a skill. Read a biography. Hire a coach. Join a group. JUST DO SOMETHING. Every. Single. Day.