No Title is the Title

This post has no title because it's about everything. Perhaps I'll choose a title from something I write further along. So, it's been a while. The last post was an attempt to get some of my readers engaged in this passion of mine. I got two brave souls to share their experiences and I think for their efforts I will choose them both as winners ~ each of the participants will receive a bar of soap, that I just this minute decided will be a bar of the soap I am making today, a concoction of patchouli, davana, frankincense, vetyver, mitti and holy basil cut fat and bulky, and an anointing oil of the same concoction, as well as a 5 ml bottle of The Scented Djinn organic alcohol based perfume. This whole year, from last September 2011 'til today I've been re-evaluating, well, everything. Whether to continue working in aromatics as a merchant, or just dabble and play and while away my days germinating, planting, harvesting, distilling, teaching, creating butaflors, hydrosols, soaps, perfumes, cooking up aromatic foods and whatnot for no other purpose than to write about them, and enjoy them. But the cruel reality is that I cannot continue to dabble and play without some remuneration, other than the .50 per book sale I currently incur from the single book I have for sale to the public, or the equally small amount of money I'd make from any other books I might publish in the future. So a merchant I remain, and now branding is the game. I'm not good at it. Awful, in fact. I've changed bottle designs and label/logo designs and remained fairly unfocused since I started all this back in 1996. Blame the ADD, blame the bad relationship, the 20-odd kids (I'm joking about that number), the bill collectors, the long days working for others, the lumpy mattress and lack of sleep, the headaches, the transportation issues, the whatever doing whatnot whenever --- oh, what a mess I've created with all these excuses. The plain fact is that I like simple. I like apothecary, oldness, dust and parchment, brown glass and corks and syrupy aromatics, the smell of old wood and the inside of antique steamer trunks. I like twine and handmade labels and handmade paper and sealing waxes and handmade incense -- Kyphi to be precise -- and patchouli powder under my fingernails, and beeswax on the air, and I especially love the old TSD logo, the lovely gypsy woman created by Kimberly Ayers just for me and my then-vision. So my then-vision is my now-vision, and I suppose my secretly always-vision (mostly a secret to me it seems) so that's where I'm going. I'm back to creating beautiful rich soaps, gorgeously dense smelling anointing perfume oils, resin blends and magic spells and good juju and mojo bags stuffed with blessings, and perfumes, perfumes, perfumes. I've got people barking at me for baby head sized bath bombs of patchouli and glitter and blue lotus balms and hydrosols and I'm listening, I am! I'm finally, finally listening. Note from my ADD: If a person barks in my town, they can be stopped and interrogated. Yep. Barking is a gang thing and can result in calls to the police from concerned citizens. So if you're going to bark at me, do it over the phone or in an email.

Today I'm making soap, bergamot petitgrain shortbread with lavender sugar dust, sugar cookies with almonds I roasted with honey and gardenia enfleurage (there are no words -- absolutely none -- that can express the joy that lives in gardenia honey almonds) and I will be doing this while drinking pu-erh from a big yellow mug, and chasing a two-year-old with serious sock issues.

YOU have a lovely day. Have a lovely life, too.

Comments

  1. Do what makes you happy even if your pockets are empty at the end of the day, if you put in the work it will pay off eventually.

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    Replies
    1. That's what I'm thinking. It definitely makes me happy, and the money comes exactly when I need it most.

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  2. Woof? I know how you feel about the branding, the sense that you have to make some money back on a pricey endeavor, but I think society also does us in a little. We live in a culture that measures success and value in dollars, and if what we love doesn't bring in a certain amount of dollars we are taught to question the value of what we love, and why we give it the place we do. Not to say we don't have to be business women sometimes, but it hurts to value something and not see the tangible evidence of others sharing that value. Anyway: I love the map you wrapped the soap I bought in, I love your trade name, maybe just do a trade + small cash transaction with a graphic designer to polish up your logo and labels, etc?

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    1. 'but it hurts to value something and not see the tangible evidence of others sharing that value' ~ yep! That's been a thorn in my side since day one. We live in a Walmart world. I remember back when I worked the craft show circuit how customers would come up and fondle the goods then tell each other they could get 'the same thing' at Walmart for half the cost I was charging, or the best one 'we can make this at home'. Yeah? Where are you going to find 100 year old sandalwood to do that? The truth is, I do love what I do, and I would do it whether I sold the product of my passions or not. It's just nice to refill the coffers to buy more aromatics and such for future aromatic endeavors. The map! Yes, the map came from an early 1900s encyclopedia. And the rest is being polished up as I write this. Thank you for your comment :)

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