Rick writes:
Gratitude has always been the foundation of the Zentangle Method. Perhaps that’s because it has always been the foundation of Maria’s and my worlds.
I remember when Maria and I were teaching a workshop in New Hampshire. Some of the attendees wanted to know how they could also teach the Zentangle Method. That request inspired our Certified Zentangle Teacher (CZT) seminars.
When we announced our first seminar for February 2009, people asked what qualifications were necessary to attend. Immediately we responded, “Passion and Gratitude!”
Our reasoning was that if you had passion and gratitude, then we knew we could teach you everything you needed to teach the Zentangle Method. We also assumed that we were not equipped to teach you how to be passionate and grateful.
Over the years, we learned we were not entirely right about assuming we couldn’t teach passion and gratitude. Because we’ve seen how people who said they couldn’t even “draw a straight line” began to revel in the beauty of the Zentangle art they were creating. They became passionate. They became grateful.
So perhaps, we did indirectly teach passion and gratitude. I say indirectly, because what I think happens is that the Zentangle Method opens a door to a person’s innate creativity. It wasn’t what we taught that made the difference, it was what people discovered about themselves that made the difference.
Once you experience creativity flowing from within you, through your pen and onto the paper, you discover how wonderful it is. And soon, you have a passion to experience more of that and witness the beauty that is coming from within you.
And then inevitably comes the gratitude . . . gratitude for the simple things . . . like pen and paper, and a chair to sit on at a table in a room that is warm and dry.
And the more you create, the more you want to create. And the more you are grateful, the more you find to be grateful for. It is a beautiful self-reinforcing cycle.
I can’t think of another artform or practice in which fully one quarter of the steps have to do with Gratitude and Appreciation.
After I wrote the first draft of this blog, I sent it to Julie. She replied, “I think this is a good start, but I’d like you to focus more on why Gratitude is the first step of the Zentangle Method since that is this month’s theme.”
I called Julie and told her that I don’t remember Maria and I ever discussing it. Gratitude was just always the first step. It was self-evident to both of us that Gratitude was the foundation of everything we were doing. Maybe it was because we were, as we often say, “taking dictation,” as we wrote down the method that wonderful weekend in western Massachusetts. I know that Gratitude was not an add-on after we came up with the method. It was always Gratitude from the start.
Welcome to the world of Zentangle. First step . . . Gratitude!
Maria adds:
I always felt that I was the luckiest person on earth. My family, friends, home, my passion for art, I could go on and on here, but I’m guessing you get the picture. Don’t get me wrong, we were not wealthy. I just believed we were. I was grateful for so much and thought about it all the time. So, it was just natural for me/us to begin a class with gratitude. Rick and I were never teachers. We made up our own rules of how we would teach.
It was so natural to be grateful for the opportunity, for our paper, so beautifully crafted in Italy, for our pencils with just the right type of graphite, and for the pens. The pens were a dream come true for me after having struggled for years with Rapidograph technical pens.
In my perspective, an artist should always use the best supplies possible, and we wanted to communicate that perspective to our students. Because of the small size of our tiles and the few tools we used, drawing with the Zentangle Method was a modest investment even with the best possible materials. It was natural to feel gratitude for the beautiful paper and elegant tools.
And also, gratitude for our students who helped us spread the Zentangle word, for our family and friends who supported us throughout our beginnings, and for each other. Zentangle would not have happened had Rick and I not met shortly before this magical journey. So, thanks Ricky. (There’s that gratitude, again . . .)
Julie adds...
When I asked Rick and Maria to write the story of why they chose Gratitude as the first step, I was not surprised when he told me there wasn't really one - it was just the obvious first step.Gratitude really is the forefront of everything we do here at Zentangle, Inc, so when we began to map out what this year-long celebration would look like, it was clear that the first blog had to be about Gratitude. It is the first step in whatever we do.
In honor of the first step of the Zentangle Method, I would like to take a moment right here, right now, for gratitude. If you are journaling along with us this year, I encourage you to take a page to dedicate to this very important first step in the Zentangle Method... Gratitude.
You can also leave your thoughts about this step in the comments below. We will be choosing one commenter at random to receive an 8-Steps Print.
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N Perkin on
Rachel S. on
Gratitude pops up, for so many thoughts and possibility’s of what’s included in Zentangle life;
An ongoing development of self,
with an accepting attitude,
always finding gratitude for little things.
I am amazed and so grateful for the joy and wellness in my life, despite difficulties I’ve experienced and been through. Zentangle is in my mind, everyday! 🙏❤️
With gratefulness and appreciation,
Annika
Annika Wiener ”Awasthlm” on
It is Gratitude
That brings us happiness
And that is what Zentangle has brought me. Waking every morning feeling gratitude to have another opportunity to create another tangle! And that brings me happiness and joy every single day. No matter what else goes on.
Kathy McMurtry CZT on
Deb Murray CZT30 on
I have a ton of gratitude for my Zentangle journey. It began like so many others — by complete chance, with a little divine inspiration.
My doctor made a chance remark around 2008 (I had recently been diagnosed with Fibromyalgia), saying, “I’ve heard there are people out there using drawing to help them cope with pain.”
In retrospect, I recall her saying that, but didn’t find Zentangle right away. Fortunately my angels were persistent because a few years later (2011), a few friends saw my drawings and the coloring books I was trying to use for pain control, and they said, “We saw this lady at a local art fair, and she was doing this Zentangle stuff. You should look into it.”
It may have taken me 6 months or a year, but I looked on the web a little, and then I picked up a new Zentangle book written by a Houston author, Becky Krahula, “One Zentangle a Day,” and I was hooked. Finally, about 6 or 7 years later, my husband and I found the funds for me to attend CZT Training in Rhode Island.
I don’t let a day go by without tangling. Yes, I do it to cope with the constant pain, but I also do it for the joy of it! For the community of it. For the feeling of success that occurs as I’m signing a new work, and also for the gratitude that I feel every time I pick up my pen and start to Tangle!
Thank you, Rick and Maria, and everyone else along the way.
Beth on
Jacki Fry Brewer, CZT25 on
Zentangle has made me more aware of the topic of gratitude in general.
Even for things that seem to be taken for granted. I am healthy, I don’t have to worry about having a roof over my head every day or being fed. I am surrounded by people who are important to me and who care about me. None of this can be taken for granted. Unfortunately, we often only realise this when something is lost.
And it’s a luxury that I can take time for myself while tangling with high-quality equipment. What a blessing. I am grateful for all of this.
Claudia on
Hello friends!
Zentangle is something very precious to me!
Ever since I was a child, I have loved to draw braids – beautiful, twisted drawings, decorations…
And when I found you I said to myself – there it is…this is my thing!
Zentangle is my passion!
What makes me unload!
What gives me the opportunity to sink into a magical world of beauty!
What fuels me!
And thanks for finding you!
Thank you that I can follow you and create together with you!
Gratitude that I can see the beauty around me!
Gratitude for all that I have!
Thanks for the result!
Gratitude is not something you can proclaim, express it loudly!
It is something secret, hidden, cherished, personal!
Something that only the soul knows!
And from which she rejoices and is happy!
And isn’t that our goal too! To make our souls rejoice!
Thank you for the joy!
Dafi on
Valerie Lynn Hodgins on
Brenda Campbell, CZT on
I practice gratitude daily, and so was over the moon when I realised it’s part of the Zentangle Method.
I am so grateful for Zentangle. It has been a life saver in quietening my busy mind.
I’m grateful that you made the CZT training virtual so I could finally become a CZT after over a decade of wanting to teach it.
I am also grateful to both of you for the philosophies behind the Zentangle Method thank you.
I’m grateful for your project packs, they help me think more creatively.
I’m grateful for all of you guys! Thank you for such an incredible life improving thing!!
Ruby McGuire on
Daily Appreciation and Gratitude, first step of the Zentangle Method… If Zentangle has taught me anything, it is gratitude and appreciation for the little things: paper, pencil, pen. . . and zen. And then how gratitude somehow sneaks into my everyday life, making me feel very lucky to be who I am and to have what I have.
carmela on
DONNA LACEY on
“Once you experience creativity flowing… you discover how wonderful it is. And soon, you have a passion ". That explains everything about the tangle method and the Tangled community to me. It’s really true that once you have a passion you end up being grateful for all it brings to you I wake up, happy and grateful for the day ahead. When I feel sad, I often will grab a tile and do some Zentangle And come out of it re-energized. Thank you for this wonderful method and for your wonderful way of living it.
Lisa Hoesing on
Grateful for Rick & Maria, for their intuition, curiosity, adventurous, generosity and being the model of gratitude. Thanks for having Gratitude (to the world, to self and to others) as the first step, which is really the essence of Zentangle Method.
CHOI Ming Kwan, CZT Asia5 on
Jessica L Dykes on
Kim on
Veronica Hodges CZT #37 Australia on
Noriko Kikuchi czt on
I do not know where to begin … growing up in India, first born of a man who was paper merchant and in love with the best pens this world (world of India) could offer. He always brought to me the world’s best paper to draw on and the best of best pens he could hold of for me – I am grateful to my father for introducing me to them.
I am since then most grateful to Maria & Rick for taking me back to my roots with their thoughts and creations in this beautiful form of Zentangle ♥️
Upasana Jain on
I am struggling with Gratitude because the world seems so dark and frightening. I want to believe that if I had a regular Zentangle practice, I could adopt an attitude more filled with gratitude for what I do have at this moment instead of being fearful of what the future may bring.
I read what other people have written here and it makes me hopeful that I could become more present and as a result, more grateful.
In fact, I have absolutely everything I need to Zentangle regularly – all the pens, paper, and time – so I shall start by being grateful for that.
I am heading to my desk to tangle as soon as I finish writing this.
Thank you for this opportunity to share my thoughts.
Laurie Nielsen on
Gratitude where to begin – I’ve been through so much however I’m extremely grateful to my girlfriend, Anna Farr who introduced me Zentangle at a critical time in my life and to Niki Lawrence my Zentangle teacher who encouraged me to become a teacher. When I went to Rhode Island to do the Seminar I had the best time I’ve had in my life and I’m grateful to Rick & Maria & all at Zentangle Inc. I’ve learnt so much and am still learning. Gratitude has become a part of my daily life this year with 3 things I’m grateful for going into my bullet journal. I never thought I could draw let alone be creative!
Sue Douglas CZT34 On Wed 10 Jan on
carmela on
I am a morning journaling person. When I started taking a Zentangle class, it was so natural to tangle on the page or xerox a tile and paste it in the journal. So I am writing and tangling and the sun starts to come up as I look eastward and gratitude just floods into my being. In a life filled with so much to be grateful for, Zentangle often slows me down just enough to quiet my mind, ease my body, and open me up to just be — in love with the world and so filled with gratitude.
Pamela Park-Curry on