Suzie Baker gets a fashion treatment from Mindy Farris. Brandy Bobeche is considering this. She heard about it through Burn Richards's marketing consultant, Nova Avon, when they all visited her in Dordrecht, Holland. Through Nova, they previously had met and hired Suzie Baker as their chef/consultant. She travelled with them to Holland and received the treatment there, in Nova's Inspiration Cottage.
The treatment consists of wearing clothes and accessories that vibrate at certain frequencies, as determined by need. This is very similar to food resonance treatments that Suzie Baker performs on her clients, so she herself was very receptive to the treatment. Brandy Bobeche will receive a treatment, too, as will her dog, Gillian. You see, Mindy Farris was a Pet Art Therapist in the past, so this streams very well into this new modality practice.
In this case, Mindy prescribed the use of black pumps, flourescent green pants and a purse in a certain red shade by the designer known as Brenee. Suzie wore her chef's coat during the treatment because it is the color white - which acts as a third point/field between the red/green opposition - and because she wears it more than any other garment. Thus, it will absorb and then radiate the appropriate waves to help her maintain balance. Suzie was sure that her imbalance was caused by gluten, something she does not want to avoid, since she is not a gluten-free chef/baker.
Mindy determined that the fashion treatment will eliminate existing gluten-fueled imbalances, and instructed Suzie to use only organic, non-GMO grains. In addition, Mindy directed Suzie to embellish any cream puffs she makes with real gold leaf, to neutralize the dairy-gluten-sugar devil triad. Coincidentally, Suzie had already begun to do this, intuitively feeling the grounding vibe from the gold leaf-- not surprising, as she is, after all, the creator of Spiritual Cooking Practice.
About this project
About this project:
Blooming Babel is a book (and blog) inspired by French romans-photos and Mexican and Italian fotonovelas (photo novels), and by a New Yorker article that extols the benefits of talking to very young children. Blooming Babel tells the story of a set of family interactions. Using texts, photographs, and other graphics, it looks at the power and identity systems within the family, and in the greater social context. But the project is also a tool to critically take apart ("unpack" & "deconstruct") social bias and the hegemony underlying media.
The plot is this: A woman known as "Sierra's mom," learns that children develop more language skills and higher IQs if their parents engaged them in conversation (even if unidirectional when the kids are pre-verbal) from the time they were born (there is really data that indicates this--but how good is that data?).The woman's adult daughter, Sierra, has a baby, and Sierra's mom worries that Sierra may not be talking to the baby enough. Sierra's mom is hesitant to approach Sierra about this because Sierra is very defensive about her parenting skills, especially when her mother tries to help. However, Sierra's mother feels that Sierra's husband, Joby is more approachable and hopes to get him on board with talking to the baby, even though he is from a different background. What kind of background will not be indicated. At some point, Sierra's mother begins to question her values and role in society. Fashion is always present.
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