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Mantras

Mantras

Thiele writes...

I first heard the mantra, “What you are not changing, you are choosing,” around this time last year. This really resonated with me as I was in the midst of many life transitions (marriage, relocation, and changing jobs). This mantra would challenge me to evaluate the things that were no longer serving me and give me some control in how I built this new phase of life. I could be deliberate about each decision – big or small. And if I stayed my course, rather than turning left or right at a crossroad, there was still intention. I could wake up and embrace the way my life looked, or I could make a change. But I certainly would not let myself get stuck looking backwards.

 

Although it seems I have been here much longer, I only just joined the Zentangle team in early February this year. As a new team member, I spent many hours, over the first few weeks, reading through blogs and newsletters, and watching extensive video content to get acquainted with the Zentangle philosophy. I kept hearing “No Mistakes.” It was written on the screen, it became a joke when “mistakes” were found throughout the videos, and it was common language between teacher and student… or Bijou and student. “There is no eraser,” “focus on the good,” etc. You can’t change it, so you are choosing it. Easy… or is it?

The message behind this Bijouism sounded awfully similar to the one behind my 2025 mantra, but had less deliberation behind it. “My” mantra says, “you can change it OR choose it.” Bijou says, “you can’t change it, so marvel at it.” If we bring both of these to the Zentangle practice… it is the difference between tangling with a pencil or a pen. A pencil allows for correction, a pen does not (unless you call on bronx cheer – if you know, you know).

As someone who likes to have a plan, I wasn’t sure how I felt about welcoming mistakes in my life. The concept was easier to embrace when I thought about the confined area of a tile, but putting them into practice when I stepped away from my tile, when something fell into my lap that I did not plan for? That felt hard. And it is hard.

As 2025 unfolded, I learned the difference between making a choice and controlling an outcome. There are moments when you can be deliberate, when you can plan and decide… but then life takes over, and all you can do is show up each day and see what unfolds. Some of the most significant things that happened this year were things I could hope for, work toward, even choose to invite into my life, but I couldn't make them happen. I just put one foot in front of the other and embraced what presented itself. And this is exactly what Bijou is teaching us… we can’t always control where our pen lands with our next stroke or where our foot lands with our next step, but we can control how we react to it. Smile at it, love it, cover it up with a bronx cheer, heavily shade on top of it… whatever you do, just move forward.

I spent months sitting with these two mantras, wrestling with their similarities and differences. And then, while doing something as ordinary as organizing my jewelry (a task I had been putting off), I found a way to hold both. Right there in front of me was the bracelet that my mother-in-law gifted to me almost three years ago – “No Mistakes” engraved on the top of it. I wear this bracelet often, loving the way it looks stacked with my other daily picks, but I did not always stop to appreciate the two words it displayed.

I realized that maybe we aren't always making an active choice, but whatever happens, it is not a mistake. It is life, it is a miracle, it is beautiful. When I naturally gravitate toward control (because this will always be my default), I remind myself that there is something wonderful about being human. We have the ability to close our eyes, even just for a moment, and when we open them again, we may be surprised by what is in front of us. But time keeps moving, as do our feet, and we find a way beyond that brief moment of surprise.

When I put the bracelet on today, I echoed the two words with the voice in my head… "No Mistakes." It doesn't replace my 2025 mantra; it completes it. One reminds me to be deliberate with what I can control. The other reminds me to embrace what I can't.

 

2025 Mantra AND "No Mistakes" Bijouism… together, they keep me moving forward, not looking back.

 

What is your mantra? Share in the comments for a chance to win a Mantra Band!

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Thiele Donovan

35 comments

  • Interesting reflection on motivational phrases. Mine today is a direction, an objective: “Be a voice, not an echo,” which drives me to take risks, develop lateral and symbolic thinking, in my Zentangle practice and in my life.

    carmela on

  • Love this. These grounding mantras are so important. My go-to is “Listen.” It seems to cover a lot of life situations, and can mean so many different kinds of listening – to others, to nature, to myself, to my breath …

    Peyton on

  • Love the article Thiele. Thank you.

    My daily mantra is: “ All is well. Thank you, thank you life, for everything, I am safe, protected and loved.” I constantly whisper “thank you”. For all the good and so-called bad. As I am going through a heavy divorce right now, in a country that is not even my own, I believe in God’s way, instead of my way. Because so much good lays ahead. With Zentangle as my daily comfort companion. Thank you 🫶🏻🙏😘

    Karin Godyns, Belgian CZT In spain 🥰 on

  • Parfaitement imparfait !

    Marilyn Lavoie on

  • Nothing happens by accident.

    There is a purpose for everything. We have a loving Father in Heaven and he knows each and everyone of us personally. What we may think is luck or punishment is from him to help us grow and improve. Just like in Zentangle we look to ways we can improve ourselves and our art when the challenges happen.

    Melinda Barlow on

  • “It matters to this one.” A reminder that just because you can’t change everything or make everything better doesn’t mean you can’t still make a meaningful difference to the one person, creature, or place you are able to help.

    TobyS on

  • My main mantra: “Everything belongs, nothing is wasted”. In Zentangle, I change it to “every mark belongs”.

    Lynn Walton, CZT 41, everythingbelongs zentangle on

  • “After all, the object is not to make art, but to be in the wonderful state which makes art inevitable.” -Robert Henry, The Art Spirit —— I’ve been carrying this one around for years and it is always up in my studio.

    Dione Greenberg CZT42 on

  • Always choose kindness in words and deeds is my mantra

    Sue on

  • Dear Lord don’t let my thoughts disturb my peace of mind I can do hard things

    Progress not perfection

    Mary Ellen Keith on

  • My mantra is “Find Joy in Your Journey”. We might feel there is an impossible wall to climb, but look for the footholds, the little crevices that give our fingers purchase to move upwards a bit. It is the simple line, not the finished picture, that might be the most meaningful to us.

    Ginger White CZT34 on

  • I’m a firm believer that everything happens for a reason and with that in mind my mantra is what’s for you won’t go by you. This can apply to so many walks of life and when you live with several chronic diseases every day of wellness is a blessing and my tangles help me to live out the joy each and every day.

    Helen waddington on

  • One day at a time. Just as it is one stroke at a time for Zentangle art, I learned 10 years ago after my daughter was in a bad car accident, that it was at first one hour at a time but then became one day at a time when she was out of ICU.

    Barb Bradley on

  • So beautifully said, Theile. Zentangle has taught me so many of these mantras that go with me beyond my tangling practice. More a guiding question than a mantra for me is, “What is mine to do?”

    Not everything IS mine to do, but listening for the action, the word, I’m called to share in a situation makes a difference. It releases me from anxiety about what feels too big, and helps me take my part alongside others who are doing their part.

    Zentangle can help us show up differently in the world-more true to who we are! I am so grateful for that.

    Diane Harpster on

  • My favorite quote is from Laura Thatcher Ulrich:

    “Well behaved women seldom make history.”

    As a Chautauqua performer I find this to be very accurate. When I am researching my personaé, there is always so little information specifically on women, especially prior to about 1950s, as their “history” was tightly woven into their husband’s.

    In my Zentangle life this is a very applicable quote as well. I feel if we “behave” and always follow the rules our art can become stagnant and feel sequestered. I truly embody the Bijou prompt of No Mistakes! My tangling isn’t always picture perfect of what was taught, and I feel that through our mistakes we learning to embrace how important mistakes can be in the"creative" process.
    So I would like to add to Bijou’s “No Mistakes”, “What if?” 💜DebiLynn

    DebiLynn Smith CZT43 on

  • My favorite quote is from Laura Thatcher Ulrich:

    “Well behaved women seldom make history.”

    As a Chautauqua performer I find this to be very accurate. When I am researching my personaé, there is always so little information specifically on women, especially prior to about 1950s, as their “history” was tightly woven into their husband’s.

    In my Zentangle life this is a very applicable quote as well. I feel if we “behave” and always follow the rules our art can become stagnant and feel sequestered. I truly embody the Bijou prompt of No Mistakes! My tangling isn’t always picture perfect of what was taught, and I feel that through our mistakes we learning to embrace how important mistakes can be in the"creative" process.
    So I would like to add to Bijou’s “No Mistakes”, “What if?” 💜DebiLynn

    DebiLynn Smith CZT43 on

  • I have so many different mantras for so many different situations. The one I love best is the one my jazz pianist husband and I came up with many years ago.

    “Life is like jazz. You gotta swing. You gotta improvise. And there are no wrong notes.”

    Deborah Lee on

  • Winston Churchill’s quote: “Stay Calm and Carry On”. Opportunities can be found if we are looking. Thank you Theile.

    Linda Evans, CZT39 on

  • I embrace ‘Anything is possible, one stroke at a time / one step at a time’

    Irene Lammerse CZTeu1 on

  • Love the comments. One I frequently refer to comes from Ivan Tate:

    “Contentment is the ability to enjoy everything and everyone without having to change anything”

    Rosalie Shultz on

  • It is what it is

    Gloria Lenzen on

  • “Don’t look back – you’re not going that way.”
    (Mary Engelbreit)

    Claudia on

  • I love this Thiele! I am going to add your mantra to my Gratitanglez drawing this week. This mantra is such a healthy reminder for us all and I like how you related it back to the No Mistakes philosophy. You are a great addition to the ZHQ team. I was happy to meet you at the CZT43 event.

    Jane Roberts on

  • “Oatmeal is better than no meal”-my dad. I think of this anytime I feel like I am not progressing enough in life. A reminder to be thankful for what I do have.

    Misty Johnson on

  • Very simply……………Faith over Fear 🌟

    Karen Bunnelle 🌟 on

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