Workshop Musings
Oct. 17th, 2007 02:18 pmQuite a few of my very dear friends here on the Island are involved heavily in the Celestine Prophecy's concept of money as a form of energy exchange. For many reasons, including the Jew gene, I'm not very fond of this idea. There are so many different ways to exchange energy. Not that I think money is evil, mind you. I just don't think its the highest vibration of energy exchange. Which essentially speaks volumes in the New Age community. You know the joke - what separates the pagan and New Age community? Two decimal points. They've asked me to present an incense making workshop to their group and knowing my reticence, suggested I ask for a $25 donation from each for the class. I can appreciate folks wanting to pay for the materials involved, especially the resins but I'm bothered by this idea. Mind you, I took plenty of workshops at that cost (and higher, on occasion). Some of which were fabulous and I was very happy to pay for the learning, others I was horrified afterward to think of what I'd paid.
Several years ago I took a fire walking workshop. It was something I'd wanted to try my whole life. The community and trust exercises were fabulous, the presenter charming. The firewalk was the issue. I'd somehow naively believed that we'd all get through with minimal burns. Naive me. I was prepared for minor burns, I've very thin sensitive skin on the bottom of my feet. However, finding myself afterwards with multiple blisters on the bottom, tops of my feet and between my toes was startling. The presenters (three of them) had absolutely NOTHING available first aid-wise. Nothing. When the biggest, baddest, scariest Asatru there could barely walk on his feet without tearing up, I lost my temper and broke into the festival kitchen to find a humongous pot and white vinegar. He and I spent about an hour soaking our feet with the hopes we wouldn't develop infections. Fun stuff. It was, however, a great opportunity to learn about Asatru. *WEG*
I won't even get into the mess of the "Winter Fairy workshop" last year. *shudder* I know I can teach a workshop *at least* better than those two. I'm hoping folks on my Flist will share their worst experiences with the thought of what to avoid as a workshop presenter.
Several years ago I took a fire walking workshop. It was something I'd wanted to try my whole life. The community and trust exercises were fabulous, the presenter charming. The firewalk was the issue. I'd somehow naively believed that we'd all get through with minimal burns. Naive me. I was prepared for minor burns, I've very thin sensitive skin on the bottom of my feet. However, finding myself afterwards with multiple blisters on the bottom, tops of my feet and between my toes was startling. The presenters (three of them) had absolutely NOTHING available first aid-wise. Nothing. When the biggest, baddest, scariest Asatru there could barely walk on his feet without tearing up, I lost my temper and broke into the festival kitchen to find a humongous pot and white vinegar. He and I spent about an hour soaking our feet with the hopes we wouldn't develop infections. Fun stuff. It was, however, a great opportunity to learn about Asatru. *WEG*
I won't even get into the mess of the "Winter Fairy workshop" last year. *shudder* I know I can teach a workshop *at least* better than those two. I'm hoping folks on my Flist will share their worst experiences with the thought of what to avoid as a workshop presenter.
no subject
Date: 2007-10-18 12:35 pm (UTC)You are using a hobbyist's mindset. Now, you are a businesswoman. What's your hourly wage (in a perfect world)? You are giving of your knowledge, hard work, successes and failures - if it were me, I'd be funneling any funds received back into my business. I'd document my mileage to the workshop, materials purchased to do the workshop, and all related costs so I could use that information for tax purposes.
Stop being an amateur. If you want Triple Pillars to be a success, start being a professional.
no subject
Date: 2007-10-18 04:05 pm (UTC)Setting aside the price issue...
For the purposes of your specialty, the MOST IMPORTANT THING that you have to have for a workshop, assuming there's going to be any hands-on stuff or sampling, is REALLY GOOD VENTILATION. Nothing kills an incense workshop faster than the smells being all concentrated and mixed up to the point that people's noses shut down out of self defense. (Bowls of coffee beans laying around for clearing the nose are also a good idea.)
Having said that, what makes an incense workshop exciting for me might be any of the following:
- getting to play with exotic or unusual ingredients
- getting to do some hands-on mixing, and take some usable (hopefully) incense home
- discussions of theory about how scents combine, and how to predict what will make a good combination, and how to think about unusual combos and come up with good stuff
- discussion of substitutions, like, "frankincense is great but if you don't like the bitter note at the end of the burning, try copal; similar scent, similar magical attributions, no bitter note."
- sooper-sekrit professional tips -- like the raisin thing, I'd consider an incense workshop worth the twenty bucks I paid for that little tidbit alone, especially if there were samples.
no subject
Date: 2007-10-18 06:02 pm (UTC)(I agree with the rest, too, but especially that one.)
no subject
Date: 2007-10-19 05:21 am (UTC)Thank you :))
Date: 2007-10-19 05:27 am (UTC)I've got over 200 ingredients, at least a 100 of which are exotics.
Hands on is great, I have about a dozen mortar & pestle sets, not to mention choppers, etc. In theory, I like to let folks make one classic formula incense and two unique ones. Often, though, we get gabbing and they only get through two.
I have a packet of substitutions, can add to it.
Sooper-sekrit, got it. :)
Re: Thank you :))
Date: 2007-10-19 05:43 am (UTC)Re: Thank you :))
Date: 2007-10-19 05:44 am (UTC)Granted if you have the time and space, drowning the raisins in wine and honey is fabulous, too.
no subject
Date: 2007-10-19 08:07 pm (UTC)My former wage was $25 per hour, I doubt I'll make that in the incense business but I do get your point. Everything at this time is funneled back into the business.
Yes, ma'm, will work on looking through professional glasses instead of a hobbyists ones.