Art for Healing
Kudos to the Montreal Museum of Fine Art for allowing physicians to write prescriptions for free admission to the museum. And kudos to Mayo Clinic for its art program. From the beginning, Mayo Clinic believed that art can uplift patients and foster healing. Whether it's Rochester, Jacksonville or Scottsdale, Mayo Clinic displays a wide range of artwork for patients. The Rochester site published a brochure for a self-guided tour of artwork. I live in Rochester and every time I'm at Mayo, I take the time to look at the artwork.
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@newzbug still, not my cup of tea. I need interactive activities.
JK
@retiredteacher when I read a good book I get totally immersed and can’t put it down. I’ve been known to be up all night reading! I do that very infrequently now.
If it’s raining in the book when I pull myself away from it I will be surprised to see the sun shining!
JK
@contentIandwell I am the same way. Once I start a good book, everything else is at a standstill. I have to credit my mother and my being an only child with a love of reading. She read to me from the day I was born, and I learned to read early to entertain myself. When I started teaching, I loved reading even more and teaching the books, plays, and poetry I assigned to my students. Reading to teach and reading to relax are entirely different, but I loved reading both ways. I read now for relaxation and do not choose books that are complicated. I enjoy mysteries and non fiction and occasionally go back to my Shakespearean plays and Chaucer and the British lit. I taught. It never gets old.
Carol
For @retiredteacher, @contentandwell and other book lovers, here is something you can relate to:
https://www.facebook.com/AuthorMaryBalogh/photos/a.186291551491885/2259948100792876/?type=3&theater
@hopeful33250 I don't stay lost in the last book. Once it's finished, I'm ready to start something new. The only exception is if I'm reading a series. Then I'm down for the count----days of reading and ignoring anything else unless absolutely necessary. That's one plus for retirement. Whatever is on the schedule can be changed if I'm lost in a book.
Carol
@hopeful33250 No, that has not afflicted me. I am not reading nearly as much these days as I used to. I had a couple of good sounding books loaded up on my IPad but they are gone now! I didn’t know they had been a bargain for amazon prime members. I had a temporary, complimentary one but they took the books away because that expired!
JK
My wife is an avid reader also. She has been reading more books on her tablet. She can check out books from the local library on her tablet. And Amazon has great marketing. The first book in a series is always free. When she gets hooked on a series, she has to pay for the rest of the books to find out how the series ends.
As a health/wellness author I'm reading all the time. We live in a townhome and I spent a fortune on three bookshelves. In mid-September we're moving into a retirement community owned/operated by Mayo Clinic. I just ordered two bookcases with drawers on the top for our new place. The construction crew is also putting in three shelves for books. I can't live without them!
@harriethodgson1 Before I moved in here a year ago, I had 4 bookcases. Two were full of my design books for quilting and crafts. I am now down to two bookcases. And both of those will go with me North to our new house. I was appalled when I moved in here, that Bill had no books! That was inconceivable to me, a house without books. Reading is my go-to. It's even more portable then my little Zentangle-kit-to-go.
Ginger
@rosemarya Thank you for the video. This is the sort of thing I would love to participate in! I cried during most of it, it affected me so much. As for Zentangle please look into it. I think that you will find focusing like that and detailed would be beneficial there are many YouTube tutorials you can go to Zentangle.com and see the founders of the movement.
Ginger