There is always a moment before a YES.
There is always a moment before a yes.
A pause.
A flutter.
A quiet hesitation.
Yes is rarely casual.
Yes can be commitment.
Yes can be growth.
Yes can be excitement.
Yes can be fear.
Yes can be vulnerability.
Yes can be change.
Yes can be choosing to take action.
Every yes carries something with it. A shift. A stretch. A movement forward — even when we can’t see the full outcome yet.
Some yeses are small.
Some yeses rearrange our lives.
But all yeses ask something of us.
Lately, I’ve been noticing how excitement and fear often arrive together. How growth almost always includes discomfort. How commitment means stepping into something we cannot fully control.
And I see these same layers showing up in my art.
In hidden words tucked beneath paint.
In bold florals that take up space.
In textures layered over uncertainty.
Each piece begins with a yes — yes to the blank surface, yes to experimentation, yes to trusting the process.
I’ve started a new floral series rooted in this idea: the Feeling of Yes. These works are becoming visual reflections of courage, commitment, change, and growth — sometimes loud and vibrant, sometimes quiet and layered beneath the surface.
This is just the beginning of exploring what yes really means.
In the coming weeks, I’ll be sharing deeper reflections on different kinds of yes — commitment, faith, endings, beginnings, courage, surrender.
If this topic resonates with you, I’d love for you to stop back here — or make sure you’re signed up for my newsletter so you don’t miss future reflections and artwork from this series.
Art begins with yes.
Life begins with yes.
What might be waiting on the other side of yours?


There is always a moment before a yes.
A pause.
A flutter.
A quiet hesitation.
Yes is rarely casual.
Yes can be commitment.
Yes can be growth.
Yes can be excitement.
Yes can be fear.
Yes can be vulnerability.
Yes can be change.
Yes can be choosing to take action.
Every yes carries something with it. A shift. A stretch. A movement forward — even when we can’t see the full outcome yet.
Some yeses are small.
Some yeses rearrange our lives.
But all yeses ask something of us.
Lately, I’ve been noticing how excitement and fear often arrive together. How growth almost always includes discomfort. How commitment means stepping into something we cannot fully control.
And I see these same layers showing up in my art.
In hidden words tucked beneath paint.
In bold florals that take up space.
In textures layered over uncertainty.
Each piece begins with a yes — yes to the blank surface, yes to experimentation, yes to trusting the process.
I’ve started a new floral series rooted in this idea: the Feeling of Yes. These works are becoming visual reflections of courage, commitment, change, and growth — sometimes loud and vibrant, sometimes quiet and layered beneath the surface.
This is just the beginning of exploring what yes really means.
In the coming weeks, I’ll be sharing deeper reflections on different kinds of yes — commitment, faith, endings, beginnings, courage, surrender.
If this topic resonates with you, I’d love for you to stop back here — or make sure you’re signed up for my newsletter so you don’t miss future reflections and artwork from this series.
Art begins with yes.
Life begins with yes.
What might be waiting on the other side of yours?