Wedding Jewelry

Wednesday, May 5th, 2010

A friend of mine is getting married this summer.  Through a wonderful synchronicity of events I offered to make her a pearl necklace and earrings for her to wear on her wedding day.

My friend knew that she wanted her jewelry to be elegant and simple.  I had no samples that I could show her and I had to start from the beginning.That is how the process of creation became an exciting adventure because I had freedom of imagination.  I really love making jewelry.  It always feels so magical when I make jewelry because time stops and I am completely absorbed and filled with joy.  It always starts with one piece that I fall in love with.  Yes, it really feels like falling in love.  I see a stone, a pearl, a piece of wood or glass and I become mesmerized by how special it is.  I touch it with my fingers and my mind’s eye sees the possibilities and from there on it is all about combining it with other things that will reveal and accentuate its beauty.

And that is how I fell in love with the pearls I picked for my friend.  I made her two necklaces and five pairs of earrings, which later I mailed to her.  I don’t remember ever sending a package feeling such tingle of excitement.  I wondered which necklace and earrings she would pick.  This is what I sent her:

Necklace 1

Necklace 2

Earrings 1 The pearls used in these earrings are 12mm

Earrings 2 The pearls used in these earrings are 8mm

Earrings 3

Earrings 4

Earrings 5

She picked Necklace 1 and Earrings 3.  Which ones would you pick?

It feels so good to know that something I made with so much love will be part of her special day.

Email me at Rethnea[at]yahoo.com if you would like me to make you jewelry for your wedding or for any other moment when you want to feel beautiful and special.

This material is protected by Copyright Law. We are freely sharing it with you with the hope of inspiring you and bringing light to your life.

© Copyright 2010, Rethnea. All rights reserved.

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How Much Value Has Corporate America Stolen?

Tuesday, May 4th, 2010

By Hypocriticist

Photo by edans

The news is full of stories about how much money the greedy bankers and corporate titans have taken from regular Americans.  I am a capitalist and so I do not trouble myself with the question. But having worked in corporate America, and seen first-hand the many meaningless jobs that are performed there, I have a different, more human question.  How much value has our society lost because of corporate America?

By value, I mean human talent, not monetary value.  Think about this: America's largest banks and corporations regularly recruit the best and the brightest young people from our top universities.  But these young people are not recruited for their ability to become corporate automatons; they are intelligent humans with human abilities: the ability to get good grades, to understand business and succeed in corporate environments, yes - but also to make music, to dance, to play sports, to create art and literature, to act and sing.  They are well-rounded people with other interests besides fulfilling a narrow corporate role.  They were picked up by corporate America because of all their God-given talent and intelligence, only to be placed into a narrowly defined, repetitive office job that occupies them 40-50 hours a week in the prime time of their young lives.  So I ask the question in purely economic terms: at what opportunity cost to society have these young minds been thus employed?  "Opportunity cost" is often defined as the 'cost' of the best foregone alternative; the opportunity cost of going to college, for example, is the money that could have been earned in the highest-paying job one could get with only a high school diploma.  So in these stark terms, I ask the question: for all the pure monetary value that our young corporate Americans have produced, what has been lost in terms of all the non-monetary contributions they could have otherwise made in all the different fields in which they might have endeavored, were it not for lucrative corporate jobs?  In other words, what else has corporate America taken from us by occupying these talented young people in full-time corporate capacities? How many latent Beethovens, Michael Jordans, Jackson Pollacks, Kurt Vonneguts or Jacques Cousteaus have failed to come to fruition because they labored safely in some stable career of the modern era - careers that did not exist in our harsher, less developed past? What human contributions has corporate America eliminated in exchange for all the wealth, goods and services it has produced?

I wonder.

This material is protected by Copyright Law. We are freely sharing it with you with the hope of inspiring you and bringing light to your life.

© Copyright 2010, Rethnea. All rights reserved.

Continue Reading