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Revealed Subject's Insight Into The Process

Nicole Purcell recently wrote a blog on dlife about her experience as a This I Believe REVEALED subject.  Her entry may be found here in their blogabetes section.  She writes about her thought process on what to put in her REVEALED box and as she says, "how diabetes has informed my "spiritual experience"."

"I was also surprised at how I felt during the session.    I was thinking through the challenges of balance, and wondering if, in the case of managing diabetes and weighing it against one’s spiritual existence, a perfect balance isn’t exactly perfect.  I struggled." Nicole Purcell wrote.

I always enjoy hearing about how a subject connects with themselves, REVEALED and even myself.  Their experience with REVEALED is different than mine and both of our experiences can be very powerful with a strong connection as we are collaborating together to "reveal" themselves.  I learn so much about myself from these connections.  Reading her essay brought tears to my eyes.  I am very grateful to hear about these experiences and also being part of them.

Visit her blog entry about the experience and enjoy.

Where the Hell is Matt - Joy!

When I stumbled across this Where the Hell is Matt video and project a few months ago I was blown away.  Yes, it came out 2 years ago, though it is new to me. This was discovered while I work on my dream to photograph REVEALED subjects around the world.  How a simple concept of dancing at locations around the world showed me how small this world is and how we are connected to everyone.  Amazing.  I look forward to taking REVEALED around the world and going below the surface and discovering our connection with each other.

What would Matt put in his box?  Or I should ask me how does that connect with me?

Check out Where the Hell is Matt's website.  I also find it refreshing that a company, Stride Gum funded such a powerful project.  I now remember that when I buy a pack of gum.

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zlfKdbWwruY&w=660&h=405]

This I Believe REVEALED Receives Grant From RISCA

I am very excited to announce that I have been awarded a new grant from RISCA to support the This I Believe REVEALED project!  The last 12 months has been a hugely  successful collaboration with WRNI's (Rhode Island National Public Radio) This I Believe series and Scott Indermaur's REVEALED project to create This I Believe REVEALED.

Over the next 12 months we will be selecting 10 more subjects and creating more events and an art exhibit throughout Rhode Island.  If you are interested in being a subject and an essayist, please follow these instructions at WRNI's site.

In addition, I will be reaching out to Rhode Island public schools to speak about this wonderful project to students.  Please contact me if your school would enjoy a presentation by myself and This I Believe host Rick Reamer to visit your school and discuss This I Believe REVEALED.

This I Believe Revealed Event

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Marque at the Jane Pickens Theater for the This I Believe REVEALED event in Newport, RI.Last week's THIS I BELIEVE REVEALED event was amazing!  With over 80 attendees and the viewing of Revealing REVEALED short film and a multi-media interview with THIS I BELIEVE REVEALED subject Jim Stahl. Dana Duellman introduced everyone and talked about the history of REVEALED.  WRNI General manager Joe O'Connor spoke about the connection with This I Believe and REVEALED and how the two projects came together to collaborate.  Rick Reamer, host of This I Believe, took the stage and gave insight into his 3-years with Rhode Island's This I Believe and the impact it has had on the community.

We then had two This I Believe REVEALED essayists read their essays.  Like a rock star's unplugged version of their song.  Liz Doucette and Sam White read their very insightful essays.

For the first time the Revealing REVEALED short film played in a real theater.  It was great to see it on the big screen. In addition a new multi-media interview with subject Jim Stahl and the impact this project has had on him.

Then I was the keynote and really enjoyed the talk about how REVEALED began and the collaboration with This I Believe to create This I Believe REVEALED.  We had a Q&A at the end with some amazing questions.  I love these questions because it gives me even more insight into this project.  I am continually learning from this project.

Of course I need to mention Ian Charles was the guest musician and his music is awesome.  The event was photographically covered by Abby McGuire.  And thank you to Jane Pickens Theater for their hospitality and use of their beautiful theater.  Also, This program has been made possible, in part, by a grant from RISCA (Rhode Island State Council on the Arts).  The prints on display were beautifully printed by Gordon's Ink and the framed by Crestar.  And of course Mirage Design who designed the flyers that were circulated.

Scott Indermaur speaks with guests at the This I Believe Revealed eventRick Reamer speaks at the This I Believe event in Newport, RI.WRNI General Manager Joe O'Connor speaks at the This I Believe event in Newport, RI.Photographer Scott Indermaur speaks at the This I Believe event in Newport, RI.Ian Charles plays at the This I Believe event in Newport, RI.

This I Believe REVEALED Jim Stahl Interview

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[youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MmrObFL6nbk&hl=en_US&fs=1&rel=0&border=1]

THIS I BELIEVE REVEALED subject Jim Stahl discusses the impact this project has had on him personally, creatively and professionally.
WRNI's (Rhode Island's National Public Radio) This I Believe -- Rhode Island and Scott Indermaur's REVEALED are two projects that have been easily merged and complement each other to create the project THIS I BELIEVE REVEALED. This collaboration makes an even greater impression and impact on Rhode Islanders through print, radio and photography that create a unique and multi-dimensional experience and personal connection for the audience.  Their essays may also be heard at WRNI's website.  Jim Stahls essay aired on WRNI in January 2010.
The collaboration features the essays of Rhode Islanders who share the core values that guide their daily lives and those individuals sharing those core values as REVEALED subjects.  The result is a powerful combination of creativity, words and photography.
This project is made possible in part by a grant from the Rhode Island State Council on the Arts, through an appropriation by the Rhode Island General Assembly and a grant from the National Endowment for the Arts.

This I Believe Revealed Event at Jane Pickens - 06/23/10

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June 23, 2010 - Join Visionary Photographer, Scott Indermaur along with This I Believe's Host Frederic Reamer and the crew of WRNI (RI's National Public Radio) for an evening of movies, music, Rhode Islanders and treats! Featuring acoustic music by: Bell Hand Records Award Winning singer/songwriter, Ian Charles! Featuring the REVEALED movie on the big screen, and presentations by Indermaur and Reamer...this is an event you'll want to be at!

This program has been made possible, in part, by a grant from RISCA (Rhode Island State Council on the Arts).  The flyers were designed by Mirage Design.

Wednesday June 23rd, 2010
6:30pm - 8:30pm
Location - Jane Pickens Theater
Address - 49 Touro Street, Newport, RI

Revealed Class Discussion at The Met - 05/05/10

Who am I without Christ? No one. With out him, I am just meaningless traits. He is my peace + my hope. The cross with the heart represents my relationship with Christ. The cross is made from a butterfly bush, representing new birth + life. The broken glass represents my imperfections; the human part of me. I love Christ, but I still screw up. The nails represent the pain of life. Just because I have hope doesn't mean my life is all rainbows + unicorns - its hard and will never not be hard, but now it's not bleak. Without Christ, my "spirit self" wouldn't even be worth a picture.

This I Believe Revealed Gallery Showing at EG Library - 06/10

September by Liz Doucette �September is the best month in Newport.� Many who live here agree. That�s not to say we don�t love July and August � summer!! � in all its crowded, event-filled glory. Of course we love summer. And we love our visitors, each and every one, traffic included. Okay, I�m exaggerating (and I can�t speak for anyone but myself). Let�s just say Newport relies on summer. Newport works hard in summer. Busy is good. Then, ahhhh, September. It�s still summer, weather-wise. The water is warm for swimming. It�s clear and breezy for sailing. Fish are biting. I might even find a parking space. Doesn�t everyone, everywhere, love September? Except perhaps the kids heading back to school? Something ends, but something else begins. Don�t we all, at every age, regard September as time to get back to � something? This year, my husband and I sent our younger child to college. We�ve just joined that very lonely-sounding demographic: Empty Nesters. But it�s not so empty. Sure, we miss the kids, but they�re doing fine � thank goodness � and there are definite upsides. We�re managing two schedules, not four; so there�s more time to do what we want. More time means more bike rides. And September afternoons, whose warm orange light lingers �til 7pm, are ideal. My husband and I go in different directions, as we go at different paces, then meet back home for dinner. Around Ocean Drive is my usual route: bumpy in spots, but less traffic in September. So, one afternoon verging on evening a few weeks back, I rode my bike out that way, and when I got to Brenton Point, it was just so darn beautiful that I stopped, parked my bike, wandered out onto the stone jetty, and watched: water, a few boats, imminent sunset. As I turned to go, a couple approached over the rocks, slippery in spots. And I heard myself say, like the mother I�ll always be: �Be careful.� Glancing back as I hopped on my bike � to make sure they were safe, I suppose � I s

This I Believe Revealed Part of Jamestown Exhibit - 05/10

Creative Kids by R. James Stahl The week of my Bar Mitzvah, a bomb-making prank (my idea) took my left eye. Until that moment, I was seeing the world as a typical 13-year-old boy sees it. Then, a second later, I wasn�t. The required soul-searching over what to place in Scott�s box revealed that what I believe, and the career I made of it, very likely began in that moment. I published writers, some of them famous now, when they still had curfews. They would mail me their folded thoughts about growing up, the trials of school, the death of a pet, the birth of a little brother. Most submissions I had to reject, but published or not each one received a personal response from my talented staff or from me. From our little Main Street office in East Greenwich, we published the best submissions in a magazine that we shipped all across the world. My experience taught me to believe in the practical value of listening to young people�s thinking. Publishing young writers sent a message of hope to creative kids who felt their talents were trivial or unwanted. Their creativity mattered to me. Even the briefest submissions could floor me. One 8th grader, for instance, wrote a poem called �Religion.� �On the sixth day,� it said, �He got up/and sprayed people /from an aerosol can /and then /God threw away /the exhausted container.� Such provocation -- in seven lines! Is creating humanity as casual as spraying air freshener in a guest room? Or does that �exhausted container� mean that the creative act fatigues even all-powerful God? Is God still omnipotent if he or she suffers fatigue? In hundreds of classrooms that read this poem, discussions took off -- all of them launched by the words of one creative teen! Publishing kids, I saw that the brightest ones teach their peers and their teachers. That�s why I believe in urging more teen involvement in our civic and volunteer organizations, in our schools, places of worship, and government. We need the brightest ideas from

Revealed Presentation at The Met - 02/26/10

The box could not hold it all, so I brought a box of my own: a Hercules Gunpowder Box, a fitting repository for my spirit. The plants are from my garden, my solace, my center, my place to connect to the bounty and wonder of the Universe. I filled my box with old wounds, many half-healed. Even as I stand under the lights, my back aches from the car crash. I question myself and my right to be here. I question my creative fire. But on top of it all is a small wooden box, carved by my brother out of a single chunk of cedar. He carved it for me when I was young and full of boundless rage � some of it directed at him. He carved it with love, as an act of contrition that I did not come to fully understand until years after he had died. It is the most precious thing I own, this box. It represents hope and compassion for the wounded parts of me. ~Stephen R.