We've decided to consolidate the blog into a single thread. The "separate blogs for separate subjects" turned out to be more complex and not so useful. From now on, everything will go straight into this stream! We'll be disconnecting the menu links to the other segments soon.
To make sure nothing is lost, we're putting all of the miscellaneous art posts into this one archive. These are the posts that didn't have their own "check this out" posting in the main blog to begin with.
"Emerging" (picture of the day)
Cartoons
Inktense Ink Block Travel Kit
Four Color Pen
Friday, February 1, 2013
Creative Writing Archive
We're consolidating all of our creative output into this one blog stream, so to make sure nothing is lost, we're putting some earlier posts into this archive. Thanks!
Mr. Speedy, X-ray Orderly
The Candidate Responds
Poem: "Kelso"
Play: "Overheard"
Debris
Mr. Speedy, X-ray Orderly
The Candidate Responds
Poem: "Kelso"
Play: "Overheard"
Debris
Monday, January 21, 2013
New Concept Art: "Anima I"

I actually "inquired of the muse" at every stage of the process, asking what kind of paper I should use, what sort of pencil, and even where I should sit. Then, as I was drawing, I kept checking to see if I was getting the shapes right, whether there were other things I was forgetting, and how each bit should be finished. It was a fascinating process! There are other elements to the complete image (she's knee deep in a swamp and gesturing toward something), but this figure was the most important one. I've been working on it most of the day. When I figure out what to do with the rest, I'll post. In the meantime, here's the concept art for "Anima I."
In case you're wondering: no, those aren't tentacles, worms or snakes. They flow, but they don't wriggle. They're both part of the head dress and part of her actual physical self--which parts are which, I'm not actually sure, though.
Wednesday, January 9, 2013
New Artwork: "The Watchers"
Tuesday, December 25, 2012
New Original Music: Awakening

Ping has been experiencing some profound things recently and just being around her as she goes through this has a certain effect on me. When we remember that we're all one, that's not too surprising, but to experience it in such an uncanny way is ...well, uncanny.
One evening, I just opened a project in my music program, Reaper, and started composing. Within a couple of hours, I had the beginnings of a piece that, to me, seemed rather unexpected. Ping heard an early version of the basic themes and said: "That sounds very much like what I'm going through!"
Over the last five days, I've spent hours and hours honing the composition and refining the arrangement. Early yesterday morning, it was done. It's just under 4 minutes long. Click on the image (above) to hear "Awakening" on YouTube. I can hear some connection to other pieces I've written, but for me this one is in a class by itself.
Read more details about the composition process below.
Friday, December 21, 2012
The Cole-Bear Report: Mass Kundalini Awakening in Airport Waiting Area
Dateline: Saturday 12/22/2012 Taipei, Taiwan
Approximately 500 people waiting to board Guru Airlines Flight 1222 bound for Tokyo have apparently experienced what some experts have called a "mass kundalini awakening."
At precisely 12:22 PM, in what one passenger from the USA whose name we could not understand, described as "the weirdest gosh-darn thing you ever saw," an entire waiting room of passengers spontaneously and simultaneously began performing seemingly random, highly complex and difficult physical movements.
A group of yoga experts waiting for their flight in an adjacent area immediately identified the movements as typical of "kundalini yoga," which one described as "a physical and spiritual experience where blocked energy is released so it can flow freely through the entire system."
Passengers who experienced it described it variously as "cool," "strenuous," "fascinating," "curious," and "Dude! Like, whoa!" According to all involved, no one got hurt, a fact which passersby such as M. Simpson of Springfield, USA, considered "amazing."
Through an interpreter, Kuang Chen-Shin of Taipei said it was "like modern dance...only weirder." Kuang said she was still feeling the urge to "breathe funny" but that the feelings apparently calmed down when the announcement to board was made.
Buford Mortimer of Alabama, USA, said: "I always thought 'kundalini' was some sort of pasta dish, but I woulda had it without the 'coon anyways, 'cause I'm a vegetarian."
Another passenger also waiting to board Flight 1222, Mr. E. Scrooge, from London, England, insisted that the entire experience was either "too much Christmas cheer" or perhaps "nothing but a bit of bad beef." When others did not corroborate Mr. Scrooge's explanation, he replied: "Bah, humbug."
;-)
Approximately 500 people waiting to board Guru Airlines Flight 1222 bound for Tokyo have apparently experienced what some experts have called a "mass kundalini awakening."
At precisely 12:22 PM, in what one passenger from the USA whose name we could not understand, described as "the weirdest gosh-darn thing you ever saw," an entire waiting room of passengers spontaneously and simultaneously began performing seemingly random, highly complex and difficult physical movements.
A group of yoga experts waiting for their flight in an adjacent area immediately identified the movements as typical of "kundalini yoga," which one described as "a physical and spiritual experience where blocked energy is released so it can flow freely through the entire system."
Passengers who experienced it described it variously as "cool," "strenuous," "fascinating," "curious," and "Dude! Like, whoa!" According to all involved, no one got hurt, a fact which passersby such as M. Simpson of Springfield, USA, considered "amazing."
Through an interpreter, Kuang Chen-Shin of Taipei said it was "like modern dance...only weirder." Kuang said she was still feeling the urge to "breathe funny" but that the feelings apparently calmed down when the announcement to board was made.
Buford Mortimer of Alabama, USA, said: "I always thought 'kundalini' was some sort of pasta dish, but I woulda had it without the 'coon anyways, 'cause I'm a vegetarian."
Another passenger also waiting to board Flight 1222, Mr. E. Scrooge, from London, England, insisted that the entire experience was either "too much Christmas cheer" or perhaps "nothing but a bit of bad beef." When others did not corroborate Mr. Scrooge's explanation, he replied: "Bah, humbug."
;-)
Monday, December 10, 2012
Poem: The Measure of Success
The Measure of Success
by Mark Ivan Cole
Massive limbs, all bleached and dry,
lie cracked and broken on the ground,
the evidence of vast expansion
long ago, before the storm.
A brittle bark now peels away
from half the trunk that towers still,
despite its many amputations.
The crown is gone, its glory shorn,
and roots lie rotting down below.
I will not mourn this ancient oak
for still a stream of life runs strong
from base to tip, from root to bud,
and every Spring, its rush of green
drinks in the sun for one more year,
for one more season,
each new leaf, a grand achievement.
by Mark Ivan Cole
Massive limbs, all bleached and dry,
lie cracked and broken on the ground,
the evidence of vast expansion
long ago, before the storm.
A brittle bark now peels away
from half the trunk that towers still,
despite its many amputations.
The crown is gone, its glory shorn,
and roots lie rotting down below.
I will not mourn this ancient oak
for still a stream of life runs strong
from base to tip, from root to bud,
and every Spring, its rush of green
drinks in the sun for one more year,
for one more season,
each new leaf, a grand achievement.
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