Showing posts with label travel. Show all posts
Showing posts with label travel. Show all posts

Sunday, 9 February 2014

Bonnie Britt - Return to Roots Project

I visited Puerto Rico for the first time about a year ago. I had been on a music festival cruise for a week and our ship stopped in Old San Juan for a day. A dear friend of mine is from PR and was living there at the time, so he took me out for the day. He introduced me to his friends, showed me the sights, local hangouts, and the vivid art scene. I was in love. The colors, the people, the language, the smells, and the sounds. Especially the song of the coqui frog at night. At the end of the day I got back on my cruise ship and set sail for home, knowing I would return.

Over the course of the next 11 months I underwent a huge transformation in my life. I quit smoking cigarettes, started spending more time with nature, eating healthy, exercising, meditating, shedding toxic relationships, listening to my intuition, creating, adventuring, and overall becoming my best self and loving it. My friend informed me that he and his new wife would be making a visit to Puerto Rico in November, so I booked my flight for a 5 day trip. As my plane was making the final descent into San Juan, my eyes welled up with tears of excitement. With no expectations, I had arrived!

The next five days were like a dream. I mean it when I say this. Actual dreams and visions I had experienced in the past 11 months were playing out in front of me, manifesting into reality. I have experienced psychic awareness before but never to this magnitude! I knew this meant I was on the right path. It's like the Universe nodding it's proverbial cosmic head at you. "Keep going!" I was creating beautiful photographs and films, feeling my vibrational energy at super high frequencies, and falling in love. Everything aligned. I flew back home to Nashville, Tennessee feeling very inspired and fully charged. 

The night I got back home I was meditating on the question: 
"What is my purpose? How can I use my talents to make a positive change in this world?"
 My creative channel was open and the idea for a new film project was planted.
Over the next two months I worked every day to save money for my return to Puerto Rico and nurtured this project into what it has become today: Return to Roots Project. This is a traveling web series I have created of short documentary films that are intended to inspire and educate the viewer on reconnecting to the Source (Earth & Divine) for needs in mind, body, and spirit. This project is my vehicle to making a change in the world, doing what I love by actively creating still and moving images, and fueling my love for travel. I am back in Puerto Rico now working on this project. 

As I write this I am in Luquillo, Puerto Rico working on an eco-educational organic farm in development as a part of the series. My time here in Puerto Rico will be spent traveling, filming, editing, learning, and growing. I am planning to run an Indiegogo fundraiser campaign for the project in March. See, the long term vision for the project is to keep it moving as a traveling web series. Upon my return to the U.S. the goal is to acquire a mobile shelter such as a trailer, RV, or conversion van and take this series on tour across the states! 

My time here in Puerto Rico is open-ended, as I bought a one way ticket. I will be here as long as I need to be. I will know when it is time to return. Learning to follow your intuition is a crazy and challenging thing. Sometimes you don't know where you will go next and it can induce fear. But it all boils down to trusting the energy flow of the Universe, Divine, God, Spirit, Shakti, whatever you want to call it. It will never wrong you. 

And when you follow the path, amazing and sometimes unbelievable experiences occur. You will create works you never thought you could handle, you will grow more into the person you wish to become, and you will go to the places you wish to go. We must all open our creative channels to receiving the work we are meant to do, and all together then we can change the world!





Thursday, 5 December 2013

Stephanie's Story - How her 5-day vacation to Hawaii turned into an 4-month adventure of a lifetime





I was recently in Hawaii for what was supposed to be a 5-day vacation to see my best friend. Chelsea was staying at a yoga-retreat on the Big Island where she was volunteering 30-hours a week in the kitchen in exchange for room and board. I stay it was supposed to be a 5-day vacation because by the second day that I had been there I knew that I had to stay longer, 4 months longer.

Rewind to about a year ago; I had just graduated from college and got my first bill-paying job. I was fortunate enough to have my best friend working with me as this job wasn't really all that it was cracked up to be from the get go.

During our lunch break, Chelsea and I would walk around the corner to go get ice cream. We'd fascinate about doing something spontaneous like coming back from lunch, announcing we were quitting and hopping the next flight to some swanky, private, get-a-way. I knew this wasn't really at all possible because it had been engraved in my brain that life works in a series of ways: go to college, graduate, find a job (in your field if you're lucky), save money (you don't actually know what you're saving for, but you better be saving), find a partner, marry, have kids, raise them to do the same-ish type thing.

Fleeing from our jobs wasn't really realistic. However, during one particular day we toyed with the idea of taking a long weekend to go to a yoga resort. Something that would both recharge and invigorate us to come back to work with a new sense of gratitude.

We started researching yoga retreats but found that there was one that definitely stuck out to us stronger than the others. An opportunity to volunteer in Hawaii at one of the top-rated yoga resorts in the world. Stay for a month to three months in paradise while you work in a department with other volunteers. The website was magnetic-- it pulled at all our heartstrings. Asking if we wanted more from life and needed to recharge. We knew we had to apply.

A week later we were both requested to move on to the second stage of the interview process where we were asked to do a phone interview. We both realized that this could in fact really be happening. I shut down; I couldn't go through with it. Give up a stable job to fly across the country and take what could be the biggest jump since well, ever. Chelsea scheduled her interview while I just let the invitation for an interview sit in my inbox.

She was accepted and knew that in a couple weeks she would be putting in her two weeks at work.

When she left, the next couple weeks were brutal. Every day I'd go home wondering why I was so scared to move forward. Being stagnant was the very thing that drove me crazy yet I was willingly remaining in the same situation while I had the opportunity to change.

I decided one night that I would be putting my dismissal in writing the next morning. I really had no plan other than I would take a weekend away to Colorado to visit from high school. The stars were clearly aligned because that night I also received a text from Chelsea's mom that she was going to send me to Hawaii to visit for a week, no questions asked, not taking no for an answer.

After lots of back and forth ad asking if she was serious-- we decided that the only time it would make sense for me to fly to Hawaii was right from Colorado. I felt confident in my decision, knowing that I was about to embark on a crazy couple weeks of traveling, I'd return home with a new perspective and begin a new job search and find something I loved.

Colorado was amazing; I was there in late April when there was still snow on the ground. This meant having to pack for two different climates-- the tropics and the tundra. My suitcase was thoroughly confused.

The flight to Hawaii was incredible. We made our final descent and I felt a wave of emotion come over me. I couldn't describe what I was feeling but I just felt at peace. I've dealt with anxiety my entire life and always described as the stereotypical weight on my shoulders. Well, after I was reunited with Chelsea at the airport-- the weight was gone. We made the drive back to the retreat in total darkness, other people were in the complimentary shuttle van but that didn't stop Chelsea and I from gossiping and catching up on week’s worth of being away from one another.

By the time we got back to the yoga the sun had set and the only light that was provided was from the stars above us. Imagine you have two fist-fulls of glitter and you toss them up into the clouds. We walked to Chelsea's tent where I was introduced to her neighbor, Majik. He politely introduced himself. We made small talk until he said something that I’ll never forget; he excused himself to go off to bed because he had to get up to go to yoga in the morning. He quickly corrected himself though and rephrased his answer saying, “I get to go to yoga in the morning.” A simple rephrase is something that made me automatically switch my thinking from the negative to positive.

The next day we woke up around sunrise and walked to breakfast where I was introduced to people from all over the world. Chelsea had already planned out our whole day, a trip to Kole Kole beach and then Akaka Falls. I don’t think my mouth shut once that day. I was in awe of everything. People’s calmness, the stillness that exuded from them. The sense of rush and franticness was no longer apparent like it was back on the mainland. My dad often still jokes that I drank the kool aid. My response is always, “Yeah, and then I asked for seconds.”
Hawaii had stolen my heart. I fell more deeply in love with a piece of rock than I ever had with another human being. For the first time in 23 years, my anxieties, worries and fears melted away like lava and I became at peace with life. I knew that I needed to stay longer than my scheduled five days. The island was taking care of me.
Chelsea encouraged me to speak with the volunteer office. I scheduled an appointment to continue with my application, the office already had my deposit and paperwork, and since I was already staying at Kalani, I could interview in person.

When it came time to go to the interview, I met Sam who was a friend right from the start. He could sense that I wanted to stay and in return he offered me a spot. The majority of volunteers slept in the campground in tents that they either had shipped from the mainland or that they had bought from the closest town about an hour away. When I was given my tent space, there was already one set up and waiting for me. It was like I was meant to be there.

I was placed to volunteer in the kitchen alongside of Chelsea and some of our dearest friends. We prepped meals for the other volunteers as well as community members and people who came to vacation at the resort. The shifts in the kitchen were filled with laughter, spontaneous dance parties (usually to Icona Pop) all whilst creating some of the freshest, most nourishing foods I've ever eaten.

I thought I would stay in Hawaii for five days but after the first month past and Chelsea left to go home, I knew I wanted to stay longer. The total time I was there was a little less than four months. During this time I made some of the best friends from South Africa to Ireland, Minnesota, to England. Such amazing people all sharing their story of being "stuck" and yearning for more from life.

I was lucky enough to travel around the island, swimming with dolphins and hiking a volcano along the way. I flew to Kauai to stay with some mutual friends in their community. My mom, aunt, and sister met me in Oahu where we got to explore Diamond Head. We flew to Maui to visit the shores and watch the surfers catch waves. The Big Island provided me with more nurture than any relationship I had ever been in. I was able to learn about myself and in return have the most unplanned and amazing time of my life.

I realize that this entry or submission may sound a bit spoiled. Please know that I did pay for my stay, travels, and other expenses out of my own pocket. When asked about finances I tell people that it was a lot like going to therapy and the best possible investment that I could of ever made. I learned more about myself during those four months than I could've ever sitting at a desk.

Staying in Hawaii was the scariest leap I ever made but I don't regret it for a second. I gained some much-needed self-confidence after spending my days in the clothing optional parts of the jungle. Was able to open my heart to self-acceptance and self-love. I participated in women's circles where I was able to here the wisdom of so many wonderful women from all walks of life.


Most importantly, I found my family. it didn't matter if it was Hawaii, Camden, New Jersey or Romania. Family is what you make it, just like that famous Penny Lane line, "you are home." Now that I'm back home in Philadelphia I see people differently, I look at everyone as a brother or sister. Not casting judgments like I would've in the past, but growing through everyone I meet. The term ohana, or family is so real that when it was time for me to leave Hawaii I had over 100 new family members that I loved like they were brothers and sisters.




Saturday, 30 November 2013

Connie McDonald, New Zealand Photographer

Connie McDonald is a 19 year old photographer from New Zealand. She loves documentaries, interesting people and stickers. She is positive and has a real lust for the beauty that can be found every single day. 




When did you first start take up photography? 
My first photographic experience was being allowed a whole roll of 35mm film in my parents' SLR to document the growth and release of our tadpoles when I was in primary school. Although, I have been living through a lens since 2010.


Where in New Zealand do you most prefer to take photos? The cities, amongst nature or suburbia?
I spend a lot of my time in the small town of Wanaka in New Zealand during my university holidays. This place is the ultimate source of inspiration for me. I watch sunrises and sunsets, with all their colours swimming into each other; there are many walks one can do, there are also so many summer roses in our garden. Taking time to let the elements of the earth wash over you is a great way to refresh. Lake Wanaka is very cold, sometimes I go for a night swim, other times I like to go and sit out in the rain or let the wind play with my hair. Nature will help you if you let it. I find nature refreshing, but i love the energy of the city also. 


What and who are your favourite things to take photos of? 
I photograph what interests me. I photograph people, places and moments I love. I don't want to lie. I love the people I photograph. They are part of my life, I enjoy their existence, and I want to photograph that, I want to record my feelings. 


Your photography is such a mix of styles and themes does this reflect on you personally or the subject/place of your photos? 
I photograph what is around me. I find the idea of genre photography to be limiting. I like photographing landscapes around me, but I do not what to only be a 'landscape photographer'. I photograph me friends in silly outfits with trinkets from the $2 shop but I do not want to only a 'fashion photographer'. I want to photograph the cinematic moments of life that grab me, and beg for documentation. 


All of your photos are so unique in how they've been photographed. Do you use editing programs or certain cameras to get the effects that you achieve? 
I do not use photoshop much. All the dreamy-ness is done in-camera, not post production. I use a lot of film, both black and white and colour, and I enjoy the physical result of a negative, it's tangibility, it's object-ness. I celebrate film grain, light leaks and film edges. 


In each of your photos is there a certain look/emotion/feel that you're trying to capture? 
In every moment I like to respond to emotions I am feeling by translating them into photographs. The immersion in ones emotions brings interesting responses photographically.


What has been your best memory and moment in relation to your photography? 
I loved photographing the kids I babysit, Grace and Alice, as they practised ballet in their studio. Their comfort, confidence and innocence was so beautiful. I love those girls.


If you could give any advice to girls wanting to become photographers or have it as a hobby, what would it be? 
Life is a journey that you are able to document. I think that is the greatest gift of all. Celebrate your favourite places, people and moments through photographs.


The New Year is approaching, do you have any goals for the future? 
I want to go to new places, meet new people, be curious and happy. 





Thursday, 7 November 2013

Bonnie Britt, American Photojournalist





"I started taking photographs when I was ten years old. From that moment on it has always felt right to be looking at my world through a lens, because that is how I see things: cinematically. In the beginning of my relationship with photography I felt that I was trying so hard to take good photos, using the tools I had learned in school to properly compose/expose the image. Then I fell in love with the work of Henri Cartier-Bresson, and suddenly learned that there is no secret to taking good photos. You simply have to look. That is when I took all the rules I had been taught and threw them out the window, letting my eyes guide me towards beauty.
To look at my photographs is to look at my Self. To feel my energy, see the magic that I see in life, get inside my mind, eyes, and heart. Taking photographs is meditative. I must be completely present, focusing all energy and love in to the moment, so when I click that shutter I have captured a moment in time that has feeling. Richard Avedon once said that photography is the death of a moment.When you look at a photograph you are literally looking at the death of that moment. It was there, for that fraction of a second and will never be again. But there is the proof that moment existed, and here is how I experienced that moment. The magic of photography continues to amaze me every time I see a beautiful image. When you look at my photograph, the light that shines in me radiates to you. It is this way with all forms of art, which is why art is so important. Life is about connecting with everyone and everything, and art is a link." 

See through my eyes and feel my spirit

To take a photograph is to align the head, the eye and the heart. Its a way of life. 
-Henri Cartier-Bresson





Find Bonnie here: 
http://bonniebritt.com/
http://bonniebritt.tumblr.com/