Poor Decisions

 

It was a good decision to publish a drawing about poor decisions.

 

poor decisions

 

Teenagers are Dumb, Adults are Dumber

As most of the US knows and feels, it’s been brutal cold all over the eastern 2/3rds of the country.  We are lucky here in Oklahoma, the cold is not nearly as bad as north and east of us. Still, it’s cold enough  (12 degrees this AM) that parents are fighting with their teenage kids about how to dress to go outdoors.  

I went to Wal-Mart yesterday. In cold weather it’s fun to make a game of finding the most inappropriately dressed person.  Yesterday, when it was all of 14 degrees with a strong wind that person was a teenage girl walking out of the store in a simple long sleeve t-shirt and shorts.  Her shoes were Tom’s type slip-on canvas shoes. No socks.  She was the winner UNTIL a second later I spotted her father walking behind her.  He was in a t-shirt and shorts.  It wasn’t hard to figure out where she got her common sense and attitude of preparedness.  Did they make it home ok? Probably so. His poor decision for himself and his daughter (yes, he was responsible for how she dressed) probably did not end poorly.  But would they have made it home ok if they had gotten into a wreck on the icy streets, going off into a culvert and disappearing from the road? Maybe not.  In which case, that poor decision could have ended badly.

Another Sort of Poor Decision

Being underdressed in the cold is dumb, but there are much worse decisions people make. Decisions with HUGE life altering consequences. But even those don’t have to end poorly.  For example, you have unprotected sex with someone and get pregnant, or get them pregnant. That was a poor decision.  But that poor decision doesn’t mean the child’s life is doomed. That life (and your life) can be a great one. Your relationship with the father or mother can be good, even if you don’t stay together.  You can arrange your lifestyle so the child is raised safe and happy.  You can build a life for your family that is positive and good. It might take more work than it would have otherwise, but it can be done.

The Kid at the Bus Stop

If I see someone at the top of a cliff, about to go over, I am going to yell and scream and do whatever I can to stop them.  But if they have already fallen off the cliff and are at the bottom, I am not going to yell and scream. I am not going to tell them they shouldn’t have been so close to the edge.  I am going to help them up, tend to their wounds and help them recover.  Then, and only then, we might have a discussion on how to avoid that cliff in the future.

If you have made poor decisions, resolve to not have them end poorly. If you are a witness to poor decisions others make, do what you can to help them have the end be rich, not poor.

_____________________

Drawing by Marty Coleman

Quote by my cool Son-in-Law and father of my granddaughter, Patrick Evans

_____________________

 

Transformation – The Napkin’s Guide to Happy Living #5

 

Here is your opportunity to see another in my Happy Living Guide, but don’t feel obligated.

 

obligation

 

Holiday Obligations

Because the holidays are just over, it’s a perfect time to talk about obligations vs opportunities.  We do much in November and December out of obligation.  And for some, obligation is a word empty of any happiness.  We have to clean house, put up decorations, take down decorations, clean house again.  We have to plan trips, plan time off from work, plan our return.  We have to worry about weather, food, clothing. We have to think about presents for everyone, or no one. And then there is family, family we may not want to visit.  But we are obligated so we do it.

Moments of Happy

Remember, I am not talking about ‘a happy life’. I am talking about ‘living happy’. There is a difference.  Living happy means you have happy moments.  That allows you to live in reality and reality includes moments that aren’t happy. But you can find happy moments in any life. Find enough of them and at the end you will likely be able to say ‘I lived a happy life’. But that will be after the fact. While you live your life you have to find happy moments within it.

Holiday Opportunities

In my experience you find happy moments within obligations when you are able to see past your expectations. When you allow the unexpected to come in. You do that by putting judgment on the shelf and forgetting it until later, and finding something to love in the moment.  For example, you go to visit your sister’s family.  You know she is going to be judgmental and controlling and nosey about your life.  That’s a drag. But her daughters or sons on the other hand, they can be an opportunity for you, finding out about who they are now, not lumping them in with your judgment of your sister. Find that happy moment with them.  You may not have a fantastic time at your sister’s house, but you can find happy moments there and you can focus on those when you tell the story of your visit to others.  You don’t have to tell the story of your judgmental sister.  You can tell the story of your amazing nieces and nephews instead.

And then maybe your next visit you will look like this as you arrive.

opportunity

 

It isn’t just over the holidays or with family this idea is important. It’s in your health and fitness, in your job, in your home design, your clothing, your hobbies, everything.  

What is an example from your own life?

_______________________

 

Love – The Napkin’s Guide to Happy Living #1

Courage – The Napkin’s Guide to Happy Living #2

Home – The Napkin’s Guide to Happy Living #3

Education – The Napkin’s Guide to Happy Living #4

Transformation – The Napkin’s Guide to Happy Living #5

Judging – The Napkin’s Guide to Happy Living #6

Expression – The Napkin’s Guide to Happy Living #7

_______________________

 

Drawing and commentary by Marty Coleman

_______________________

It’s the Day Before Christmas – A Christmas Poem

 

It’s the day before Christmas, 
Most things are done. 
Now it’s about cooking, 
and having some fun. 


A few presents to wrap, 
A little cleaning to do. 
Getting ready for Santa 
To come through the flue. 


Miracle in the background, 
On TV and life. 
A movie, a moment, 
A respite from strife. 


Children amped, 
Anticipation supreme. 
Wanting them happy, 
With joy to beam. 


For me I want,
What I already own.
A family, a love,
A life well honed.


For you and yours,
My wish is the same.
That you have joy,
And love untamed.

 

I love you all,

Marty Coleman, The Napkin Dad
Christmas, 2010

Christmas #1 – Shopping

 

Merry Christmas and Happy Holidays to all my Napkin Kin!

 

This year I am reposting Christmas Napkins from years past.  Here’s one from 2010.

christmasshopping1_sm

 

This is ironic since I have to go out shopping today!

 

Education – The Napkin’s Guide to Happy Living #4

 

Take an educated guess as to what day it is? It’s Happy Living Day #4!

 

Education - happy living #4

 

On Topic Education 

I can explain things pretty well.  Much of the time this ability is due to my education.  I am relatively educated about art for example and I can explain certain things about it. Most of us can do that in some area.  My father could talk forever on all facets of aviation.  My sister can talk about genealogy in detail.  My wife on the business of electrical and gas utilities, my oldest daughter on neuroscience, my youngest on fashion design.  

Off Topic Education

But what about areas that have no connection to anything in your life, what is the value of being educated in those areas?  In 2005 Steve Jobs gave a commencement speech at Stanford University.  He said something very important about how education really happens.

“Reed College at that time offered perhaps the best calligraphy instruction in the country. Throughout the campus every poster, every label on every drawer, was beautifully hand calligraphed. Because I had dropped out and didn’t have to take the normal classes, I decided to take a calligraphy class to learn how to do this. I learned about serif and san serif typefaces, about varying the amount of space between different letter combinations, about what makes great typography great. It was beautiful, historical, artistically subtle in a way that science can’t capture, and I found it fascinating.

None of this had even a hope of any practical application in my life. But ten years later, when we were designing the first Macintosh computer, it all came back to me. And we designed it all into the Mac. It was the first computer with beautiful typography. If I had never dropped in on that single course in college, the Mac would have never had multiple typefaces or proportionally spaced fonts. And since Windows just copied the Mac, it’s likely that no personal computer would have them. If I had never dropped out, I would have never dropped in on this calligraphy class, and personal computers might not have the wonderful typography that they do. Of course it was impossible to connect the dots looking forward when I was in college. But it was very, very clear looking backwards ten years later.

Again, you can’t connect the dots looking forward; you can only connect them looking backwards. So you have to trust that the dots will somehow connect in your future. You have to trust in something — your gut, destiny, life, karma, whatever. This approach has never let me down, and it has made all the difference in my life.”

Replacing Explain

So, the idea stated by Mr. Jobs above is that ALL of your education matters. It doesn’t matter just for your job, it matters for your happy living.  Yes, the more you educate yourself the more you can explain things, explain connections, explain ideas, to others.  But it is more than that.  Here is what I mean.  In the quote above, replace ‘explain’ with ‘understand’.  Now replace it with ‘please’.  Now replace it with ‘forgive’.  

A lifestyle of self-education is a major key to growth, to understanding, to wisdom about yourself.  And those things can lead to some level of living happy. 

Replacing Yourself

Now go even one step further.  Replace ‘yourself’ with ‘others’ – explain others, understand others, please others, forgive others.  Commit to self-education throughout your life and it leads not just deeper into yourself, but past yourself to others.  And then you will really be living happy.

________________________

Love – The Napkin’s Guide to Happy Living #1

Courage – The Napkin’s Guide to Happy Living #2

Smiling – The Napkin’s Guide to Happy Living #3

Education – The Napkin’s Guide to Happy Living #4

Transformation – The Napkin’s Guide to Happy Living #5

Judging – The Napkin’s Guide to Happy Living #6

Expression – The Napkin’s Guide to Happy Living #7

________________________

 

Drawing and guide by Marty Coleman, who once took a course on building a stone wall without mortar.

________________________

 

 

Home – The Napkin’s Guide to Happy Living #3

 

Smile, it’s Happy Living day #3!

 

the guide to happy living 3

 

A Short Short Story

She was raised swimming and it made her smile when she was able to afford a pool when she grew up.  She loved cats and it made her smile when her cat would come and play with her.  It made her smile to drink her favorite coffee when she sat out in the late morning.  She was happy living.  The End

Holiday Time

The Holiday season is a great time to do create a world that makes you smile.  My friend Danielle, the force behind Extraordinarymommy.com, posted this photo the other day. The caption that went with it read, “I have moved my office into the family room… I want to embrace every minute of this view…”

 

Danielle Smith's family Room

Danielle Smith’s Family Room at Christmas Time

Why was that? Because the view made her smile.  Obviously she and her family live a comfortable and well-off life.  But that is not the key to the happiness this room gives her.  The key is the love that went into it, not the money.

Humble is no Excuse

Very early on in my first marriage, we lived in a 90 year old rental house in downtown San Jose, California.  Most of our furniture was old, hand me down furniture.  But we still were able to make the space warm, welcoming and pleasing.  We had a really old trunk I bought for $3.00 at a garage sale in San Francisco as our coffee table.  It had brass hardware on it. I took the hardware off and polished it to a high sheen. It made a big difference in the look of the trunk. It made me happy to put my feet up on it. 

We weren’t able to do everything we wanted to the house or have all the furniture we wanted, but what we had we made as beautiful as we could.

Suburbs Are No Excuse

Years later, after we moved to Oklahoma and could afford a nice, big house,  my first wife and I divorced. I retained ownership of the house and our daughter’s lived with me during the school year, since their mother had moved out of the school district. During the summer they lived mostly at her house. I took advantage of having them gone most of the summer to paint the inside of the house.  I painted it red, gold, and cream.  Sound crazy? I loved it. It made me happy.

 

1800aster-coloredinterior

Our home 1994-2006, Broken Arrow, Oklahoma

 

I added black spots to my white picket fence so it matched my dalmatian, Oreo. That made me smile and it made the neighborhood kids smile.

 

me_oreo_fence

Oreo and the Barking Fence

 

I remodeled my kitchen, taking out a dropped ceiling. After I was almost done I still had some holes in the ceiling where electrical and other things had come through.  I decided that instead of fixing the holes in the traditional way I would cover them by hot gluing the ceramics my daughters had created in elementary school onto the ceiling. My kitchen ceiling became a permanent art gallery.  That made me smile and it made my daughters smile.  No, none fell down.

 

1800aster-kitchenceiling

My Daughters’ Ceramic Gallery

 

Crazy Artist Type

I know what you are thinking, ‘Marty, that’s fine for you, you are the crazy artist type and can get away with that stuff. But not me.’  You would be surprised what you can do if you decide it’s is worth doing.  The idea, no matter what level of creativity you have, is to create a physical world that makes you smile. Do it a bit at a time, as you can afford it and as circumstances allow, and it will add to your happy living. Don’t settle for a world that doesn’t make you smile.

What have you designed or experienced that makes you smile?

________________

Love – The Napkin’s Guide to Happy Living #1

Courage – The Napkin’s Guide to Happy Living #2

Smiling – The Napkin’s Guide to Happy Living #3

Education – The Napkin’s Guide to Happy Living #4

Transformation – The Napkin’s Guide to Happy Living #5

Judging – The Napkin’s Guide to Happy Living #6

Expression – The Napkin’s Guide to Happy Living #7

________________

Drawing and Guide by Marty Coleman, who isn’t above framing postcards that make him smile.

________________

 

Courage – The Napkin’s Guide to Happy Living #2

 

Once again the key to happy living comes from speaking AND doing.  It’s great to say you love something, but it’s in the doing that you understand what that really means.

 

courage to say and do what you love

 

Courage, Creative and Practical

There are at least two elements to this.  The first is illustrated in the drawing, finding a creative outlet you love.  The second is the day to day life you lead and the practical choices it entails.

Creativity

I’ve mentioned this before but it’s such a fundamental lesson it bears repeating; if you are going to be a consistent creative force in the world you have to love what you do and let the world know it.  It might seem obvious but the roadblocks can be high. To give just one example, the woman in the drawing might have a spouse, family, employer or church who does not approve of her doing nude sculpture.  But if the nude is what she loves, if it’s what she is creatively moved by, then she has to find a way to make it happen. She has to find the courage to stand up and say, this is what I love to do.  She has to do this knowing she will face the anger, misunderstanding or rejection. That is the definition of courage.  She does it because creating her art as she pleases makes her happy and that is worth it.

Practical

There are other examples that reside in our daily life. They involve individuality, style and interests.  For example, the woman who likes blue eyeshadow but knows people laugh at it and thinks it’s tacky.  The man who likes to bird watch even though all his buddies like to hunt and think he is a wuss.  The couple who like to take separate vacations even though their families think it means they don’t really love each other.  The female bodybuilder with 10 cats whose landlord makes fun of her.

What they all have in common is their pursuit of what makes them happy and their willingness to face disapproval because of it.  What are some other examples?

Developing

I first wrote the guide above to say ‘Have the courage…’ but I changed it to ‘Develop the courage…’ because I realized as I wrote it that courage is a muscle. It’s no different than a physical muscle. It needs to be developed through practice and training. One needs to learn what it entails and how to implement it.  How to withstand an onslaught.  How to respond to an attack.  How to make peace with disapproval.  It isn’t easy.  I like to think I’ve been a courageous artist for 40 years and it still is hard for me to face the disapproval of my wife or family or the art world or society.  Trust me, I know. I live in Oklahoma, the land of judgment.  I don’t have all the answers but I know one aspect that helps, and that’s to have a sense of humor about it.

Reward

In my years of going through it I discovered something.  The happier and more confident I am about my choice and direction, from the beginning, the more those around me bow to it. I don’t mean bow in any sort of grandiose way, I mean that those who see a confident person stepping forward in a creative vision usually respond with respect after a while. Yes, they may push back at first, but if you are consistent and resolute, they see you are not going to be stopped and they let you go.  That is where consistent application of your creative vision gains a reward for you.  You become known as that person.  Your identity is secure and others respect and admire that.

Be courageous, confident and consistent in the choices that make you happy and others will see it and respect it over time.

What examples do you have of courage and creativity?

__________________

Love – The Napkin’s Guide to Happy Living #1

Courage – The Napkin’s Guide to Happy Living #2

Smiling – The Napkin’s Guide to Happy Living #3

Education – The Napkin’s Guide to Happy Living #4

Transformation – The Napkin’s Guide to Happy Living #5

Judging – The Napkin’s Guide to Happy Living #6

Expression – The Napkin’s Guide to Happy Living #7

__________________

Drawing and guide by Marty Coleman, who has been known to draw naked people himself.

__________________

Love – The Napkin’s Guide to Happy Living #1

 

TheNapkin's Guide to happy living 1

 

The First Responder

My daughter, Caitlin, was driving from Dallas to Tulsa, coming home for Thanksgiving, a few weeks back.  There was a car accident immediately behind her and she stopped to help. She steeled herself to perhaps see something pretty traumatic but luckily the guy wasn’t really badly hurt. She went to her car, got paper towels and other stuff and helped him with his injuries.  She didn’t think of her actions as being about love I don’t think.  But they were.  She could have driven on. She could have just watched from a distance.  But she didn’t. She chose to get involved and help him.

Acting

When I first came up with this I had it as ‘Think in terms of love’. But I quickly remembered another important lesson, ‘It’s easier to act your way into another way of feeling than it is to feel your way into another way of acting.’ and realized that many times the action of love has to come before the feeling (or thinking) of love.  The action actually leads one closer to the feeling, they compound each other.

Thinking

Even though acting is key, acting without thinking can lead to many missed opportunities. The reason is this; just as a frame around a painting changes the painting itself, how you frame what you experience changes the experience.  For example, when you see an activity, let’s say a business trip, as an obligation or duty then there is a certain dread attached to it. But if you think of it as an opportunity to show love, then there is much more excitement and enthusiasm for it. 

Love to Whom?

But a business trip? How can I show love on a business trip? It’s actually a great opportunity to evaluate and frame what it is you do, seeing if what you do can be categorized as love, or, if not,  can adjust your attitude or actions to be more loving? Think of all the people you meet on a business trip? Flight attendants, fellow flyers, cab drivers, hotel staff, business colleagues,  restaurant workers.  What better group of people to help you see if how you act (and think) is in terms of love?  

Happy Living

The end result of acting and thinking in terms of love is that you feel happy.  Happy with yourself, yes. But just as likely you will feel happy about the circumstances you are in as well.

And since it’s impossible to live a happy life all at once, the best we can do is to have happy moments within a life. Have enough of those and at the end you will discover you’ve lived a happy life.  And it all starts with love.

____________

 

Love – The Napkin’s Guide to Happy Living #1

Courage – The Napkin’s Guide to Happy Living #2

Smiling – The Napkin’s Guide to Happy Living #3

Education – The Napkin’s Guide to Happy Living #4

Transformation – The Napkin’s Guide to Happy Living #5

Judging – The Napkin’s Guide to Happy Living #6

Expression – The Napkin’s Guide to Happy Living #7

__________________

Drawing, quote and commentary by Marty Coleman

__________________

Perfect vs Wonderful – A Thanksgiving Lesson

I think it’s a perfectly wonderful week to talk about Thanksgiving

thanksgiving - perfect vs wonderful

The Mouseketeer

Annette Funicello was a founding member of Disney’s Mouseketeers. She then went on to star in Beach Blanket movies with Frankie Avalon and record chart topping records. She had it all; looks, fame, money and adulation of fans around the world. She also had MS, which caused her to retire well before she would have otherwise.  When she made it public she was inundated with messages of sadness and sorrow for her plight.  In response she said this, 

“Life does not have to be perfect to be wonderful.” 

Annette Funicello – Mouseketeer & star of Beach Blanket Bingo

The X Factor

One of the past contestants on ‘The X Factor’, Rion Paige, was born with wrists and arms that are bent at wrong angles and can’t move as you would expect.   She is up in front of millions and millions of people singing, showing the world all her ‘imperfections’.  She is the one on the competition who is the biggest smiler, the sweetest laugher, the most thankful in her responses to the judges.  Her body may not be ‘perfect’, but her attitude is.  I have no doubt she has this quote on her refrigerator.

Rion Paige

Perfect vs Wonderful

I know for me, when I like look for the perfect in myself, others and the world around me, I see imperfection. But when I look at the wonderful in myself, others and the world around me, I see perfection everywhere.

The Vintage Napkin

I have used this quote before, WAY back in 2002 when I was drawing the napkins for my daughters and putting in their school lunches.  

_____________________

Drawing by Marty Coleman

Quote by Annette Funicello, 1942-2013, American actress and singer.  

 

____________________