Posts Tagged ‘speech’

Manhattan, NY to Manhattan, KS

Tuesday, October 13th, 2009

I’m halfway in the air right now between New York and Kansas City with a clear view of the veiled sky beneath. My mind is the only element of this flight that is clouded over – fogged up from too few hours of sleep over the last few weeks. The therapeutic tap-tap-tap of my fingertips atop my MacBook keypad of this very entry teases out the invisible impulse of thought – a sinuous river rich and writhing with electrical impulses, like the Pacific streams that once throbbed with Oncorhynchus migrating from the Mother Sea.

My fingertips pass over the black lettered key beds like a blind man over Braille. It’s the same foreign familiarity I felt when my hands passed over piano keys just five short months ago. How embarrassed I had been to have forgotten four years of childhood practice. I was afraid to approach the dressed keys. They seemed so formal; the sound – just a faded memory. And yet he told me to let my hands fall heavily upon the keys, allow them to slump like the dead weight of one’s body before it passes into slumber, or death, or dying. He said to let them make mistakes, (if there ever was such a word)…To allow them to hear the notes reverberate from the hollow halls of the wooden case – as if those very discordant sounds would summon the vestiges of musical memory.

I was bemusedly astonished that the cobwebs began to clear after a few short weeks of furtive vespertine rehearsal. The ear became attuned to tune, and the fingers played without any noticeable cognitive approval from the brain. It was only when I would come “back to my senses” that my fingers would stall in starts and fits, as if my cerebrum was second-guessing such melodic movement. This made me wonder if one is too capable of thought, too trapped in ones own bell jarred-notions – if such philosophizing would only create a Mr. Palomar out of us…never bestowing the owner of such onerous ponderation with any sort of self-actualized creative inspiration or inspirational action, just a purgatorial cycle of self-admiring adulation.

I accept how perfectly paradoxical this all seems, especially as my mind comes to a clearing just as stormier cumulus clouds heave their heavy bosoms into the plane’s view. Our vessel rumbles over the blushing glow of the sky and we receive word that there are rain clouds hanging low over Kansas. It’ll take two hours to reach my surrogate home. Jana from Kansas State University, who I met nearly five years before in Aveda’s New York offices, will pick me up in an orange VW bug and deliver me to a quiet Bed & Breakfast in Manhattan, Kansas.

My last two weeks were overflowing before I even had a chance to drink in all the flavors that life has poured into my cup. Now I’ll spend the next couple days delivering two talks (“The Art & Science of Good Design,” and “The Journey: A Career in Eco-fashion”) at Kansas State University, (which has graciously begun using my book in their freshmen fashion classes), followed by two talks at Payless addressing the Collective Brands Sustainability Task Force and all the folks working at the headquarters. It’s a full agenda that will find itself face first into forty more consecutive days of conferences, presentations, photo shoots, trail running, parties, meetings, filming, and perhaps…if there is a moment for the mind to let go…a little music from the fingertips, eyes closed.

Show some CLASS

Sunday, December 7th, 2008

CLASS - ecofashion invite

The Tipping Point: What is the current state of sustainable fashion? How has the current economic downturn affected the industry? And how do we create pathways towards change?

All very good questions. Let’s see if we can answer them!! I’ll see you there.

6PM-7:30PM Roundtable; 6PM-9PM event. 233 Park Ave S, 2nd Fl

Speech! Speech! But can you cut the price?

Monday, December 1st, 2008

Summer Rayne Oakes speaks at the Race Against Global Warming event in Santa Cruz, CA

On a cool, gray London morning this past Wednesday (26th of Nov), I had a pleasant surprise in my inbox  when I was notified of a mention in the New York Times. The gist of the article was that there is a need for serious speakers on the environment, but not all places can afford Al Gore prices. Check out the feature below…

In the past few weeks agents at American Program Bureau, which represents authors, entertainers, politicians and others who make the lucrative rounds of the speaking circuit, have received several calls from organizations looking to book someone to speak about the environment.

“They all say, ‘Can you get us Al Gore?’ ” said Robert Walker, founder and chief executive. His agency doesn’t represent the former vice president, but Mr. Walker said that when his agents pointed out what kind of fees Mr. Gore tends to receive, none of the organizations could afford such sums in this economic climate.

So the agents recommended others on their client roster, including John Passacantando, executive director of Greenpeace USA, and Summer Rayne Oakes, a board member and occasional correspondent on the Planet Green network. “She’s not even a quarter of the price of someone like Gore, but she has a lot to say,” Mr. Walker said.

I’ve just wrapped up some university events, a couple board events and have a few conferences coming up around the corner. You can check out some of the topics I’ve been speaking about on my site here, so if you’re interested in having me speak, feel free to give us a call and we’ll try to make it happen.

View and read the rest of the article at NYTimes.com here.