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#Kintsugigallery
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Page Updated on:
6/2/2024
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Books and publications about healing, psychology, self Improvement and Christianity using Lakeside Pottery's Studio's Kintsugi Art
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Writing to Heal: Self-Care for Creators
by Kendall Johnson
I’ve been broken by the world, I’ll admit. Stronger now at some of my broken places, yet scarred in many ways…. As teacher, trauma therapist, and on-scene crisis consultant, my icon - my guiding hope - has been the kintsugi image: a broken ceramic bowl with the parts glued back together, the scars and seams shining with resin and gold.
Writing and art have been my salvation
—Kendall Johnson
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Jung Journal | Kintsugi Vase Made For President Biden
Katherine Olivetti interview with Morty Bachar
I am honored that one of my Kintsugi art pieces is featured on the Jung Journal cover page and in an article based on an hour-long interview conducted earlier with the magazine's editor. The article covers the specifics of the shown red Kintsugi vase I made for the White House as a Presidential gift handed by President Joe Biden to the PM of Japan. It also covered my Kintsugi, ceramic art, and 3-D art restoration journey related to the Jungian theory, tapping into the unconscious mind.
Jung Journal is a Culture & Psyche a quarterly international magazine published by the C.G. Jung Institute of San Francisco, one of the oldest institutions in America dedicated to Jungian studies and analytic training.
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This book by bestselling author Sr. Kathryn Hermes can help you reshape past regrets and disappointments in the context of your life story. Real-world examples, powerful meditations, and Sr. Kathryns own experiences can transform a feeling of midlife stagnation into spiritual liberation.
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Learn how to embrace the adversity in your life, heal your wounds, and build a more resilient you in Céline Santini’s award-winning self-care book inspired by the ancient Japanese art of Kintsugi. Winner of the 2019 Golden Nautilus Book Award. www.esprit-kintsugi.com | TedTalk
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Certified Life Transition & Recovery Coach. As your coach, I will be your support & guide in moving forward & creating a life you love
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You are unique, not despite your circumstances but because of them!
Miriam Grunhaus shares how the Japanese art of Kintsugi – the art of mending broken pottery with lacquer and gold, catapulted her onto a healing path after her own irreparable heartbreak. For two years, she interviewed “Thrivers,” women who had faced tremendous and varied adversity, to learn the commonalities of their journeys from despair and brokenness to healing and wholeness. From those interviews, Miriam gleaned Ten Golden Nuggets, which are essential to uncovering joy in adversity. Miriam’s heart is healed, and she offers this book to provide the resilience tools you need to traverse valleys of life and rise up on mountains of joy.
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Picking Up The Pieces
A Practical Guide for Leaders in a Post-crisis world
Dr. Hilary Cooke - Merlin Consultancy
As the economy opens up again, we all hope to return to business so that it is sustainable and even stronger than before. In the aftermath of the corona-virus crisis, you will need every single person to be fully engaged and open to new ideas and ways of working. Leadership is the golden resin thread that will hold it all together and if ever there was a time for a clear and well-formed leadership strategy and style, it is now.
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Kintsugi is the Japanese art of putting broken pottery pieces back together with gold - built on the idea that in bracing flaws and imperfections, you can create an even stronger, more beautiful piece of art.
In my opinion Kantha is to India what Kintsugi is to Japan. Indian artisans take vintage saris that to others might appear ready for the trash, with rips, tears or stains but instead they piece them together and create this beautiful - line design that makes the imperfection just part of the charm of these rustic creations. More: www.therusticbohemian.com
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A Healing Relationship
Richard G. Erskine
Commentary on Therapeutic Dialogues contains word-for-word transcripts of three actual psychotherapy sessions accompanied by Dr Erskine’s comments about the theories and methods that have influenced his therapeutic involvement with each client
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The Power of Self-Acceptance
Harper West Psychotherapist and Author
Harper West is a contributing author of #1 Amazon and #4 New York Times bestselling “The Dangerous Case of Donald Trump,” and award-winning “Pack Leader Psychology.”
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After Rena Romano gained the courage to speak out about her experience of childhood sexual abuse, she discovered that few victims have the same supportive experience. This compelling talk reveals a new approach allowing each of us to aid sexual abuse survivors to lead healthy, happy, productive lives. “How you and I react and speak to sexual abuse survivors can make a difference in whether we shut down or get help,” Romano says. “If healing begins by telling, then we must make telling safe!” Discover how in this talk by a woman who learned by living it. Rena used one of our Kintsugi / Kintsukuroi bowls to illustrate the metaphor.
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HowStuffWorks
Kintsugi: What a Broken Bowl Can Teach Us
When something is broken, it's normally considered damaged goods, a lost cause or otherwise beyond hope. But that's not so in Japanese society. The 15th-century art of Kintsugi, which translated means golden joinery, reclaims the beauty of a damaged gold repaired pottery. Broken, the latest episode from The Stuff of Life podcast, looks at this idea of brokenness in our world, from a personal and political perspective, and how, ultimately, we can gain strength from it.
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4 Steps on the Road to Healing from Childhood
Peg Streep, PsychCentral
I think this is how we need to look at healing. To close our wounds with new understanding but, nonetheless, to realize that our experiences make us unique, not flawed. Think of the repairs you are making to the broken pieces of your spirit as rivers of gold. Think Kintsugi repair.
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Kintsugi & Christianity
We need more golden repair in our lives because we so often hide our brokenness.
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Ruthie Young
What Can We Learn From a Broken Pot?
We need more golden repair in our lives because we so often hide our brokenness.
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Wabi-sabi Wisdom - Inspiration for an Authentic Life
Andrea Jacques
Wabi-sabi, which is a philosophy of finding the beauty in imperfection, popped into my head and I had this visual of exactly what the book should look like.
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Chiara-Lorenzetti
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Success by Accident
The Kintsugi Path to a Fulfilling Life
Andrea Jacques is the founder of Kyosei Consulting and the author of Wabi-Sabi Wisdom: Inspiration for an Authentic Life (now available on Amazon). She has spent more than 20 years developing the potential of people and businesses worldwide. Five of these years were spent in Japan where the core philosophies of her work on the relationship between passion, performance and profits took shape. A dynamic speaker, coach, and facilitator, her work integrates leading eastern and western thought with top-tier leadership, wellness and sustainability consulting to help individuals and organizations discover and thrive on their passions.
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Japanese Bonsai Pot - Ryan Bell
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Psychologytoday
Healing Unloved Daughters and the Art of Kintsugi
So, when we talk of healing the wounds of childhood, we should bring the image of a beautiful cup or bowl repaired by Kintsukuroi to mind, its cracks and breaks repaired with gold and made into shining patterns of great beauty and oneness. That image may help us focus on how our past experiences inform those in the present, to better see how the behaviors we adopted in childhood to cope may animate our behaviors and choices now, even as we move away from the past. As a layperson and fellow traveler, not a day goes by that I don't appreciate how my childhood even now shapes the woman I am, in ways both seen and unseen, good and bad. Rather than see them as scars, seeing those wounds as lines, rivers, and patches of gold, silver, or copper brings a smile to my face. |
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The Art of The Well Lived Life
Musings on Art, Life and the Art of Life
Michelle Andres Art
Love the look of Kintsugi. You know, the Japanese pottery with the intentionally decorated crack in it? The ceramic vessels have an incredible, gold streak adorning them, boasting their history and celebrating their imperfections.
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