Love, Friendship & Persistence

Hi all!

Just got back from great holidays (vacation) in Canada, Detroit and New York. It was so wonderful to see both new friends and old. I met up with one pal, that I hadn’t seen in 16 years. We’re mates from way back. Happily I was also able to meet up with a few of my fellow voice artists — who are some of my great cyber-pals — from various voice over forums (mostly VO-BB!).

I am really blessed to have had the chance to travel with my hubby, and to meet up with my chums. Hooray for life!

My dear friend Michelle from Chicago

My dear friend Michelle from Chicago

Hubby and I got to spend a bit of time in Detroit to hook up with Michelle. It was wonderful. You’ll find out more about our adventures in my travel blog on the Motor City, Detroit, MI–USA.

In Toronto with fellow voice artists, Elaine and Jodi

In Toronto with fellow voice artists, Elaine and Jodi

In Toronto, Canada, we hung out at the Frog and Firkin with my voice over pals, Elaine Singer and Jodi Krangle. More Toronto exploits to follow in a future blog.

In New York at the cafe with my pal Liz

In New York at the cafe with my pal Liz

New York is such a buzzing city. There’s lots to tell and show in another blog. But this piccie is of fellow voice over talent Liz de Nesnera and myself. I was so happy to finally get a chance to meet Liz face to face. she’s a real star!

I found a little friend to keep me company in the waiting queue at the CN Tower in Toronto, Canada

I found a little friend to keep me company in the waiting queue at the CN Tower in Toronto, Canada

OK, maybe this isn’t a friend in the sense of the word as my other pals, but if a moose had a voice…I could do it! (I’ve done dustballs, dogs, cats & babies voices!) The CN Tower was fantastic and we got a great view from the top. This little moose was to keep us company and pass the time while moving along in the hour-long queue.  More later…

Changing the subject…here’s a little story on the power of persistence & accomplishing a goal one step at a time. Kind of like building a voice over career!

 

THE SECRET GARDEN

Several times my daughter had telephoned to say, “Mother, you must come and see the daffodils before they are over.” I wanted to go, but it was a two-hour drive from Laguna to Lake Arrowhead. Going and coming took most of a day – and I honestly did not have a free day until the following week. “I will come next Tuesday, “ I promised, a little reluctantly, on her third call.

Next Tuesday dawned cold and rainy. Still, I had promised, and so I drove the length of Route 91, continued on I-215, and finally turned onto Route 18 and began to drive up the mountain highway. The tops of the mountains were sheathed in clouds, and I had gone only a few miles when the road was completely covered with a wet, gray blanket of fog. I slowed to a crawl, my heart pounding. The road becomes narrow and winding toward the top of the mountain. As I executed the hazardous turns at a snail’s pace, I was praying to reach the turnoff at Blue Jay that would signify I had arrived. When I finally walked into Carolyn’s house and hugged and greeted my grandchildren I said, “Forget the daffodils, Carolyn! The road is invisible in the clouds and fog, and there is nothing in the world except you and these darling children that I want to see bad enough to drive another inch!” My daughter smiled calmly, “We drive in this all the time, Mother.” “Well, you won’t get me back on the road until it clears – and then I’m heading for home!” I assured her. “I was hoping you’d take me over to the garage to pick up my car. The mechanic just called, and they’ve finished repairing the engine,” she answered. “How far will we have to drive?” I asked cautiously. “Just a few blocks,” Carolyn said cheerfully. So we buckled up the children and went out to my car. “I’ll drive,” Carolyn offered. “I’m used to this.” We got into the car, and she began driving.

In a few minutes I was aware that we were back on the Rim-of-the-World Road heading over the top of the mountain. “Where are we going?” I exclaimed, distressed to be back on the mountain road in the fog. “This isn’t the way to the garage!” “We’re going to my garage the long way,” Carolyn smiled, “by way of the daffodils.” “Carolyn,” I said sternly, trying to sound as if I was still the mother and in charge of the situation, “please turn around. There is nothing in the world that I want to see enough to drive on this road in this weather.” “It’s all right, Mother,” She replied with a knowing grin. “I know what I’m doing. I promise, you will never forgive yourself if you miss this experience.” And so my sweet, darling daughter who had never given me a minute of difficulty in her whole life was suddenly in charge – and she was kidnapping me! I couldn’t believe it. Like it or not, I was on the way to see some ridiculous daffodils – driving through the thick, gray silence of the mist-wrapped mountaintop at what I thought was risk to life and limb. I muttered all the way. After about twenty minutes we turned onto a small gravel road that branched down into an oak-filled hollow on the side of the mountain. The Fog had lifted a little, but the sky was lowering, gray and heavy with clouds. We parked in a small parking lot adjoining a little stone church. From our vantage point at the top of the mountain we could see beyond us, in the mist, the crests of the San Bernardino range like the dark, humped backs of a herd of elephants. Far below us the fog-shrouded valleys, hills, and flatlands stretched away to the desert. On the far side of the church I saw a pine-needle-covered path, with towering evergreens and manzanita bushes and an inconspicuous, lettered sign “Daffodil Garden.” We each took a child’s hand, and I followed Carolyn down the path as it wound through the trees.

The mountain sloped away from the side of the path in irregular dips, folds, and valleys, like a deeply creased skirt. Live oaks, mountain laurel, shrubs, and bushes clustered in the folds, and in the gray, drizzling air, the green foliage looked dark and monochromatic. I shivered. Then we turned a corner of the path, and I looked up and gasped. Before me lay the most glorious sight, unexpectedly and completely splendid. It looked as though someone had taken a great vat of gold and poured it down over the mountain peak and slopes where it had run into every crevice and over every rise. Even in the mist-filled air, the mountainside was radiant, clothed in massive drifts and waterfalls of daffodils. The flowers were planted in majestic, swirling patterns, great ribbons and swaths of deep orange, white, lemon yellow, salmon pink, saffron, and butter yellow. Each different-colored variety (I learned later that there were more than thirty-five varieties of daffodils in the vast display) was planted as a group so that it swirled and flowed like its own river with its own unique hue.

In the center of this incredible and dazzling display of gold, a great cascade of purple grape hyacinth flowed down like a waterfall of blossoms framed in its own rock-lined basin, weaving through the brilliant daffodils. A charming path wound throughout the garden. There were several resting stations, paved with stone and furnished with Victorian wooden benches and great tubs of coral and carmine tulips. As though this were not magnificence enough, Mother Nature had to add her own grace note – above the daffodils, a bevy of western bluebirds flitted and darted, flashing their brilliance. These charming little birds are the color of sapphires with breasts of magenta red. As they dance in the air, their colors are truly like jewels above the blowing, glowing daffodils. The effect was spectacular. It did not matter that the sun was not shining. The brilliance of the daffodils was like the glow of the brightest sunlit day. Words, wonderful as they are, simply cannot describe the incredible beauty of that flower-bedecked mountain top. Five acres of flowers! (This too I discovered later when some of my questions were answered.) “But who has done this?” I asked Carolyn. I was overflowing with gratitude that she brought me – even against my will. This was a once-in-a-lifetime experience. “Who?” I asked again, almost speechless with wonder, “And how, and why, and when?”

“It’s just one woman,” Carolyn answered. “She lives on the property. That’s her home.” Carolyn pointed to a well-kept A-frame house that looked small and modest in the midst of all that glory. We walked up to the house, my mind buzzing with questions. On the patio we saw a poster. “Answers to the Questions I Know You Are Asking” was the headline. The first answer was a simple one. “50,000 bulbs,” it read. The second answer was, “One at a time, by one woman, two hands, two feet, and very little brain.” The third answer was, “Began in 1958.” There it was. The Daffodil Principle. For me that moment was a life-changing experience. I thought of this woman whom I had never met, who, more than thirty-five years before, had begun – one bulb at a time – to bring her vision of beauty and joy to an obscure mountain top. One bulb at a time. There was no other way to do it. One bulb at a time. No shortcuts – simply loving the slow process of planting. Loving the work as it unfolded. Loving an achievement that grew so slowly and that bloomed for only three weeks of each year. Still, just planting one bulb at a time, year after year, had changed the world. This unknown woman had forever changed the world in which she lived. She had created something of ineffable magnificence, beauty, and inspiration. The principle her daffodil garden taught is one of the greatest principle of celebration: learning to move toward our goals and desires one step at a time – often just one baby-step at a time – learning to love the doing, learning to use the accumulation of time. When we multiply tiny pieces of time with small increments of daily effort, we too will find we can accomplish magnificent things. We can change the world.

“Carolyn,” I said that morning on the top of the mountain as we left the haven of daffodils, our minds and hearts still bathed and bemused by the splendors we had seen, “it’s as though that remarkable woman has needle-pointed the earth! Decorated it. Just think of it, she planted every single bulb for more than thirty years. One bulb at a time! And that’s the only way this garden could be created. Every individual bulb had to be planted. There was no way of short-circuiting that process. Five acres of blooms. That magnificent cascade of hyacinth! All, all, just one bulb at a time.” The thought of it filled my mind. I was suddenly overwhelmed with the implications of what I had seen. “It makes me sad in a way,” I admitted to Carolyn. “What might I have accomplished if I had thought of a wonderful goal thirty-five years ago and had worked away at it ‘one bulb at a time’ through all those years. Just think what I might have been able to achieve!”

My wise daughter put the car into gear and summed up the message of the day in her direct way. “Start tomorrow,” she said with the same knowing smile she had worn for most of the morning. Oh, profound wisdom! It is pointless to think of the lost hours of yesterdays. The way to make learning a lesson a celebration instead of a cause for regret is to only ask, “How can I put this to use tomorrow?”

~ By Jaroldeen Asplund Edwards, this story is also known as,
‘The Daffodil Principle’ and ‘Where the Sun Splashed Gold,’ from her book
Things I Wish I’d Known Sooner: Personal Discoveries of a Mother of Twelve

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 Cheers!

 

Got the Travel Bug!

A collection of global travel pics…

Travel –good voiceover dialect variety study… good time away from home for a bit!

Travel has a way of stretching the mind. The stretch comes not from travel’s immediate rewards, the inevitable myriad new sights, smells and sounds, but with experiencing firsthand how others do differently what we believed to be the right and only way.

–Ralph Crawshaw

Canals of Venice, Italy

Canals of Venice, Italy

 We must get beyond textbooks, go out into the bypaths and untrodden depths of the wilderness and travel and explore and tell the world the glories of our journey.

–John Hope Franklin

Japan -- Sushi served at a celebration dinner

Japan -- Sushi served at a celebration dinner

When preparing to travel, lay out all your clothes and all your money. Then take half the clothes and twice the money.

–Susan Heller

   

 

 

Devon

Devon, England

 

A journey of a thousand miles starts in front of your feet.

– Lao-tzu

 

GrandPlace Townhall, Brussels, Belgium

GrandPlace Townhall, Brussels, Belgium

A traveller without observation is a bird without wings.

–Moslih Eddin Saadi

Hatherleigh Sculpture, England

Hatherleigh Sculpture, England

 The man who goes out alone can start today; but he who travels with another must wait till that

other is ready.–Henry David Thoreau

 

Osaka, Japan (piccie taken by my hubby)

Osaka, Japan (piccie taken by my hubby)

Good company in a journey makes the way seem shorter.–Izaak Walton

Palm Trees in India

Palm Trees in India

 Simplicity is making the journey of this life with just baggage enough.–Charles Dudley Warner  

 

 

Pelican feeling sociable in Cyprus

Pelican feeling sociable in Cyprus


 

 

 What’s your favourite travel destination?

 

 Cheers!
 
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Standing Tall

Seven key steps to a higher self image

 

For all of us voice over artists before we step up to that mic.

For anyone, who needs a good, shot of confidence…it’s within us (sometimes hard to find, but it’s there!) 

1.   BE aware, positive, and pause to take control.

2.   RELAX, and remove any self criticism.

3.  SMILE and exude confidence.

4.  VISUALISE the response you require.

5.  HEAR your words before you speak them.

6.  REVIEW your objectives and your self image.

7.  BE the person you imagine you need to be.

 

From one of my favourite books: The Greatest Personal Success Tips in the World by Brian Larcher

Cheers…

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GOOD-BYE Mr. Chocolate Salty Balls (Isaac Hayes)

Flowers on display at an Ayurvedic Clinic in India

Flower display at a wonderful Ayurvedic Clinic in India

 

Sad news the other day (10 August) …. Isaac Hayes, the writer and recorder of the “Shaft” film soundtrack (for which he won an Oscar for Best Score) has died.

He was famous as a singer and actor in the showbiz world, including performing the voiceover for the part of Jerome “Chef” McElroy in South Park. His voiceover work in the show was splendid and often had me rolling on the floor (ok, not exactly…but I did get a good laugh out of it).

Mr. Hayes built up a solid, multi-facted character in that Chef role. Streety and snappy without going into stereotypes. According to what I’ve read, he did end up leaving the show because of its attacks on the religious group to which he belonged, Scientology.

Anyhow…..Rest in peace Sir…and blessings & love be with you in your transition.

Photobucket - Video and Image Hosting

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TIME OFF is good!

Taking a little time off from the Voice Over world, — and in hubby’s case — the world of Osteopathy, we enjoyed a day at the Motor Show at Docklands Excel. It’s a fab way to get into a posh car, live the good life and not break the bank.

And it’s good for a couple to share each other’s interest — lots of fun!

My turn...whey-hayyy!

My turn...whey-hayyy!

 AND NOW

David -- happy and off in his own little world!

David -- happy and off in his own little world!

 

Have a fabulous day,whatever day it is that you read this post!

 

  

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Gratitude, Love and Hard Work!

Let us be grateful to people who make us happy;

they are the charming gardeners who make our souls blossom.

Marcel Proust

 

We got a most bountiful harvest from our garden last night.  I am grateful to nature for these gifts! I couldn’t bear to just cut it up and cook it. So now it’s been saved for all time in digital form. Though I’m thankful for this food, but it did indeed take a lot of work to being it to fruition.

 

I guess that’s just like life and friendships. Love being a member of all of my various internet groups, but if you’re going to get anything meaningful out of being involved, you have to work at it, don’t you?

 

Just like a voiceover career. Having a nice voice is only the smallest part. Having an agent is often a small part too. We have to constantly network, market, study and beaver away ourselves. Ahhhh, the thrill of the chase. And finally reaching the finish line isn’t half bad either! Then we’re off again….    :D

 

What to do in between times? Be grateful for the gigs we have landed. Spend time with family, hubby and friends. I also like doing craftwork — making jewelry, embroidery and so on.

 

Been reading some good books lately as well. Here are some suggestions!

 

♦   Ireland – In a Glass of its Own – Peter Biddlecombe

(funny travel read)

 

  Step Up to the Mic – Rodney Saulsberry

(inspirational voice over book)

 

Goal Mapping – A Practical Workbook – How to Turn Your Dreams into Realities – Brian Mayne

(make a plan and map it to make it work)

 

  The Amber Spyglass (actually the whole trilogy) – Philip Pullman

(fabbo — can’t wait for the next 2 films to be made)

 

Spending way too much time on the internet today….. !

 

Cheers! 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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A Love Story

Here’s an article that I read from an e-newsletter that I subscribe to. It’s really lovely!

Kerala India -- Solar Cafe

Kerala India -- Solar Cafe

 

 

 

They called it Puppy Love

The frustrated mother spoke quietly to the shelter volunteer. “Danielle keeps repeating it over and over again. We’ve been back to this animal shelter at least five times. It has been weeks now since we started looking for a dog.”

“What is it she keeps asking for?” the volunteer asked. “Puppy size!” replied the mother.

“Well, we have plenty of puppies, if that’s what she’s looking for.”

“I know… we have seen every single one of them,” the mom said in frustration…

Just then Danielle came walking into the office — but no puppy in hand. “Well, did you find one?” asked her mom.

“No, not this time,” Danielle said with sadness in her voice. “Can we come back on the weekend?”

The two women looked at each other, shook their heads and laughed. “You never know when we will get more dogs. Unfortunately, there’s always a supply,” the volunteer said.

Danielle took her mother by the hand and headed to the door. “Don’t worry, I know that I’ll find one this weekend,” she said.

Over the next few days both Mom and Dad had long conversations with her. They both felt she was being too particular. “It’s this weekend or we’re not looking anymore,” Dad finally said in frustration. “And we don’t want to hear anything more about puppy size either,” Mom added.

Sure enough, they were the first ones in the shelter on Saturday morning. By now Danielle knew her way around, so she ran right for the section that housed the smaller dogs. Tired of the routine, mom sat in the small waiting room at the end of the first row of cages. There was an observation window so you could see the animals during times when visitors weren’t permitted.

Danielle walked slowly from cage to cage, kneeling periodically to take a closer look. One by one the dogs were brought out and she held each one. One by one she said, “Sorry, you’re not the one.”

Danielle slowly approached the last cage. The volunteer opened the cage door and the child carefully picked up the dog and held it closely. This time she took a little longer.

“Momma! Momma! I found him! I found the right puppy!” she screamed with delight.

Her face beamed as she shouted. “He’s the one! I know it!”

Mom, startled by all the commotion, came running.“What? Are you sure? How do you know?” she asked.

“It’s the puppy sighs!”

Her mother was baffled. “But it’s the same size as all the other puppies you held over the last few weeks,” she said.

“No not size, Mom! It’s the SIGHS. When I held him in my arms, he sighed,” she said as she clutched the tiny dog to her chest. “Don’t you remember? When I asked you one day what love is, you told me that love depends on the sighs of your heart? The more you love, the bigger the sighs!”

The two women looked at each other for a moment. Mom didn’t know whether to laugh or cry. As she stooped down to hug the child, she did a little of both.

“Mom, every time you hold me, I sigh. When you and Daddy come home from work and hug each other, you both sigh. I knew I would find the right puppy if it sighed when I held it in my arms,” she said.

Then holding the puppy up close to her face she said, “Mom, he loves me. I heard the sighs of his heart!”

Close your eyes for a moment and think about the love that makes you sigh. I not only find it in the arms of my loved ones, but in the caress of a sunset, the kiss of the moonlight and the gentle brush of cool air on a hot day.

They are the sighs of the heart. Take the time to stop and listen; you will be surprised at what you hear. Life is not measured by the breaths we take, but by the moments that take our breath away.

~By Bob Perks, professional speaker, author and vocalist.

 

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Hello world!

Hi! I’m an American Voice Artist living in Britain & loving it. I voice mainly, Animation, Audiobooks, Computer Games, Corporate work (voice mail, website welcomes, podcast, e-learning…), Narration and Radio Drama and Talking toys. Haven’t done all of those yet, but they’re on my availability/goals/challenges lists!

 

I’m a great believer in positive thinking, networking, friends, love and hard work. As they say, luck is when preparation and opportunity meet!

Big fan of Rodney Saulsberry and Pat Fraley. Those guys are super. I’ve learned so much about the art of voiceover from them.

I love visiting my fave voiceover forums and interacting with my cybermates. You’re never alone when you’ve got a good back up ‘cyber crew!” I work in English and Japanese (intermediate-level) –mostly English, though the last gig that I did was a little Japanese-language Corporate one. Dialect study with British RP is great fun & proving to be useful as well.

Love travelling — so maybe this blog will revolve around voice over, travel, positive thinking tidbits and life!

VOICEOVER DEMOS

Please visit my Voiceover Demos  page for sound bites!. I’m also a member of Linked In.

 View Stefania Lintonbon's profile on LinkedIn

Cheers!