The Mane Attraction: Suzy Berry’s Heart of Gold Sanctuary Saves Horses

I am … hesitating. Here I am about to write a hagiography (a saint’s life), albeit for a nudes-selling, secular saint. But I am no rube, and there are no heroes. Those that were—the old ones—have all been torn down. 

And yet, I must admit—there are villains. There is even an arch villain now. Does that bring heroes into existence? It certainly cries out for heroes.

Perhaps Suzy Berry is a new kind of hero … a hero for these strange new times—in a word, a forgiveness-preaching pin-up, who sells frilly vintage and soft-core porn to rescue “broken” horses.

My first encounter with Berry began in skepticism over floral lattes (at Sebastopol’s Retrograde Coffee). I suppose it was my first impression of blond perfectionism—too sweet, too perfectly pitched—quite like a good witch Glinda. As a wounded cynic, I anticipated a mask. I began with appearances.

Sipping my latte, I asked, “Ms. Berry, I spoke with Chai-spiced clothing designer Chenoa Faun. She described your aesthetic as ‘Venus de Milo meets Lucille Ball.’ She also said that you can wear ‘the sluttiest thing’ and render it ‘classy and timelessly classic.’ I asked her about your most famous original design … ‘The Naked Dress?’”

Berry lit up and said, “Yes! I made the first one for my best friend. She had a shoot with a famous photographer and needed something fabulous to wear. So, I made her a skin-colored chiffon mermaid dress—completely sheer, no lining. And then I took white Alençon lace, cut out motifs of my favorite flowers, and hand-stitched them over the breasts and the private areas, accenting them with Swarovski crystals. So she looked completely nude with these crystallized flowers just where it counted. That design was such a hit, I quickly made and sold maybe 30 of those in a short time span.”

I leafed through her reference photos as Berry spoke, stopping at the vision gracing this week’s collectible cover, and said, “Ms. Suzy, looking at this photo, I am struck with a resemblance with the folk heroine Lady Godiva [who averted her lord husband’s war by riding a horse naked through town]?”

At that, she clapped her hands together joyfully, saying, “Yes, I love her!”

It suddenly occurred to me to say, “This is random, but would you portray her in the Apple Blossom Parade?”

“Well, of course!” she replied, laughing.

“Or perhaps the next Women’s March,” I said, darkening. “It would be a romantic and powerful scene… Ms. Suzy, apart from the image-making power of the Disney Princess machine, what would you say is the true romance of horses?”

She considered this and said, “Well, they have their play and their horsey drama, but they spend a lot of their time in a meditative state—and that presence rebalances us. The electromagnetic field generated by a horse’s heartbeat is actually 10-times larger than that of a human, so when you enter their space—about 50 feet—they will begin to sync your heartbeat to their own, slowing it and calming it. 

“Horses have a great size and muscular power,” she continued, “and yet they are incredibly sensitive and highly emotional creatures. Their capacity for energetic reception and non-verbal communication is almost telepathic. It’s magic!”

“…The power and beauty of these creatures makes the mythic unicorn seem superfluous,” I mused. “… It also makes the abuse of these angelic creatures seem demonic. You have described to me some horrific cases of abuse, Suzy. Why do people beat horses?”

She leaned back, drained her cup and said, “I think punishment-based training comes from fear. People don’t want the challenge and opportunity of a horse expressing its free will. They want a horse that is so subservient that won’t even turn its head when something moves in the trail brush … I always had a strong personal knowing that those that seek total control are actually the weakest people … ”

“Suzy, could you give our readers a sense of how you rehabilitate horses before rehoming them?” I asked.

Her response was, “Yes! Normally when a horse comes to us, it comes from a situation that has not been good. The horse will come with a dull personality—or a fearful one. They will be like, ‘Oh no, don’t touch me!’ The term is ‘dead broke,’ which is such an ugly word, but it’s true—it’s like part of their spirit has died … all for the sake of letting a human feel ‘safe’ using them. Which is so wrong, it’s outrageous. I don’t know how people don’t see that, but they don’t.” 

Rehabilitation starts with her volunteers, said Berry. 

“We have amazing volunteers. They cuddle with the horses, give them treats, lots of grooming. Spend time with them, not asking anything of them in the beginning. Asking nothing—only giving, because obviously, the horse-human relationship has been unbalanced for a while, and it’s caused them to shut down and expect nothing,” she explained. 

“So, we start building the expectation that this should be a partnership. That it should be balanced. That they should always get something—verbal praise, a treat or just love-energy—directed at them. Something must be given back. It can’t be ‘human takes all, and the horse must be subservient or is punished’ … My ‘training’ is strictly rewards-based,” Berry continued.

“That’s beautiful, Suzy. Your process sounds unsparing and, well, expensive…,” I said, gesturing down at the photos. “Could you tell us about the style of erotic content you sell to pay for horse rehab—I believe you place it in the genre of ‘solo’ porno?”

“Well … it has a throwback Hollywood pin-up girl theme—set against a backdrop of mystic blue, gold and crème. Everything is vintage. The lingerie is either designer or made by me. It’s set to vintage music played on vinyl. … And it’s just me … enjoying myself,” she laughed. “I bring joy and the opposite of shame—embodying sexuality in the most positive and happy, innocent way. I never understood why people demonize sex …” Berry said, tossing back her strawberry mane.

“What little I reviewed to write this article seemed to be in your authentic character, Susy. I was reminded of a frocking mare … well, in heat,” I said. And we laughed together.

Indeed, her erotic content has the quality of innocence—not the innocence of a child, pre-trauma, but that of an adult, post-healing. And speaking of the garden and the fall of man, Berry later told me that given the inevitable sexual exploitation of women in late capitalist society, she decided to form a business that allows her to trade sex safely—and even turn the tables on certain would-be predators by getting them to pay and pay and pay. 

And she has the added reason that her spoilt horses basically eat bales of cash.

Across our several visits to her rescue ranch (and one fashion ball), in the context of a growing mutual trust, Berry volunteered to tell me about how she had been sexually abused—in her early career as an exotic dancer at private clubs and Craigslist listed “parties.” I’ll not print that here. But what she told me reminded me of her stories of horse abuse and the scourging of the innocents. I began to see the parallels and linkages between her abuse, horse abuse, her rescue and horse rescue. They were linked, locked and one in the same.

Revisiting our interviews, I found I had one more question. I met her with her long-term partner at her parents’ house. “Suzy… you are so light—how did you heal?” I asked.

“Lots of therapy,” she replied, bursting out laughing. “Especially psychedelic-assisted therapy. It let me see things from a place of non-judgment and no fear. And the horses! Horses are the greatest healers of all. They get you so grounded and present, you’re like, ‘Everything is cool right now, and so the past is not that important.’ They get you there and hold you there.”

I laughed, saying, “It reminds me of what people commonly say about their rescue dogs—‘They rescued me!’”

Pursuing a last line of journalistic hero-skepticism, I later talked to an ex-employee, Regina Davis (talk to exes for the dirt!). Davis reassured me, saying Berry was “the most amazing woman I have ever met.” 

On the theme of healing, Davis described her own physical and mental beautification under the care of the horses she was helping Berry to “rescue.”

She told me how, having been just summarily fired from a job of 20 years, she approached a horse that, sensing her bottled-up pain, pulled her into a long horsey hug of head and neck and chest, where she just cried and cried and cried until she was emptied of grief.

And … I was convinced.

There is a quality to Berry—her light. Her light as she stands in the strength of our ancient allyship with the horse and speaks with love and compassion about forgiveness and redemption, rehabilitation and healing, expiation of sexual shame and the innocence of sexual joy. 

She’s a hero.

Help. Suzy Berry recently had to give up her ranch lease and divide her rescues between multiple guesting properties. She is looking for hands, donations, vintage sales and new video subscribers. Her dream is to own land here and open a permanent center for horse rescue, non-exploitative horsemanship, horse-assisted psychotherapy, fairy tale weddings and a death-positive hospice for the dying. Visit heartofgoldsanctuary.org.

Winter Wanderings

Occidental

Winter Is Coming

With the coming of winter also comes the urge to attend the Barbara Higbie & Friends Winter Solstice Concert. The upcoming performance is part of the annual Winter Solstice Concert Series at Occidental Center for the Arts (OCA). For this year’s festivities, the North Bay gets to celebrate the holiday season alongside Barbara Higbie, a Grammy-nominated pianist and composer. Higbie’s star-studded ensemble includes musicians such as Michaelle Goerlitz, Vicki Randle, Lena Anderson, Jasper Manning, Kofy Brown and Mia Pixley. The Barbara Higbie & Friends Winter Solstice Concert will take place at 7pm, on Saturday, Dec. 21. Tickets cost $32 in advance, $27 for OCA members (and $5 more at the door, if still available). Fine refreshments and an open art gallery will complement the performance. So, it’s almost time to warm the heart at 3850 Doris Murphy Ct. in Occidental for the holidays. For tickets and more details, visit occidentalcenterforthearts.org.

San Rafael

My Voice Matters

The exhibition of student artwork at San Rafael’s Youth in Arts, My Voice Matters, has earned an extension, giving one until Dec. 13 to check out this display of young artistic talent. This show features the work of three high school artists, Heath Carbone, Lea Ortiz and Maddie O’Sullivan, all students whose pieces tackle themes like identity, personal experience and social justice. With its focus on showcasing the voices of local youth, My Voice Matters highlights the vibrant creativity of the next generation of artists. This event also marks the first-ever student-curated show at Youth in Arts, and it is a true celebration of the voice set to shape Marin’s artistic future. The closing reception is set during San Rafael’s 2nd Friday Art Walk, from 5 to 7pm on Dec. 13. There, one may meet the artists, explore their work and take part in a free, hands-on artmaking session in the Art Lab. For more details, visit youthinarts.org.

Guerneville

Chanukah Oy Chanukah

The holiday season may be rung in with music, joy and community at Chanukah Oy Chanukah, a festive celebration hosted by Two Tribes and vocalist Lois Pearlman. Now in its third year, this lively event promises a mix of traditional Yiddish songs, contemporary tunes and instrumentals performed in Yiddish, English and Ladino, too. This musical evening will include performances by Laurie Lippin, Chris Eccles, and, of course, Pearlman (a Weeklys contributor). One may come out and listen to these performers take to the stage and share their love for the music of the Jewish diaspora through song. The Chanukah Oy Chanukah concert will take place from 7 to 9pm on Friday, Dec. 27 at Books and Letters, located at 14045 Armstrong Woods Rd. in Guerneville.

Corte Madera

Wanderers


Wanderland Writers will introduce the ninth anthology in the “Wandering” series with a reading at 2pm, Saturday, Dec. 14, at Book Passage in Corte Madera. Entitled Wandering in American Deserts: Discovery, Visions, Redemption, this new volume explores the haunting beauty and eccentricities of American deserts. It features the Joshua tree, named by Mormon settlers for its resemblance to the biblical figure’s raised arms. Readers will encounter natural wonders—shaman-worthy rock caves, quake-altered terrain and a resurrected ancient sea—alongside a starlit sky as it was at the dawn of time. The anthology also captures desert life: birds, coyotes, lizards and the power of silence. It profiles diverse characters, from Cahuilla musicians to cowboy poets and eccentrics like a wizard and a misfit painter finding salvation on a mountain. Contributors include Madeleine Adkins, J.R. Barnett, Daphne Beyers, Hugh Biggar, Michael J. Fitzgerald, Peg Wendling Gerdes, Cyndi Goddard, Thomas Harrell, Naomi Lopez, Mary Jean Pramik, Anne Sigmon, Tatum Tomlinson, Maw Shein Win, Judy Zimola and others. Book Passage Corte Madera is located at 51 Tamal Vista Blvd. bookpassage.com. The event is free.

Your Letters, 12/11

Critical Cry

I am offended by Stephen J. Lyon’s snide, hateful, self-righteous rant (“Open Mic,” Nov. 27) and I am disappointed that the Pacific Sun chose to publish it.

I believe it is true that we will have the best people in charge of our health and that is great news for our sick nation and our children’s future. 

Thank goodness the EPA is now being forced to remove fluoride from our water, which has proven to lower children’s IQs.

It strikes me as ironic that he predicts a spike in grocery prices. Didn’t that already happen under the Biden-Harris Administration?

Then he plays the race card. Wow. “That damned woman of color” lost the election not because of her gender or her ethnicity but because she promised us four more years of censorship, reckless spending, a widening wealth gap and the threat of nuclear annihilation.

Melanie Peratis

Fairfax

R-E-S-P-E-C-T

One of the fun aspects of the American mood disorder of the past 40 years or so is the rapid onset and expansion of public lying, disrespectful interactions and general trash talk by children disguised as responsible adults across the board.

And I don’t mean by just Donald Trump and his people, the true elite professionals.

Disrespect shows up in many forms and is often practiced by educated, entitled male individuals who live in our North Bay, not just by immigrants like me.

Guys, just until the end of the month, let’s see if we can notice ourselves saying and doing disrespectful things to our spouses, our children, our friends, our retail clerks, our police officers and women in general. 

Let’s see if we can make it a habit.

Of course, for those public officials who openly invite ridicule, let them have it.

Craig J. Corsini

San Rafael

DOGE-Style: The coming ‘Musk Bust’

Elon Musk and Vivek Ramaswamy are partnering to create a new U.S. government agency, the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE). 

Musk underwrote the Trump campaign with $200 million in donations and his own brand of buying votes.

Supposedly, the acronym comes from Musk’s favorite cryptocurrency, the Doge. Whatever. 

So yes, Musk paid for his new appointment, which represents a colossal conflict of interest, as that agency reportedly, avowedly, will shut down many regulations that currently govern aspects of Musk’s enormous U.S. government contracts. Can there be a shred of doubt that corruption won’t feature in nullifying EPA regulations on SpaceX, Tesla and other Musk holdings?

Musk and Ramaswamy tell Forbes they will cut some $2 trillion in U.S. federal spending. What do they intend to defund?

They will get rid of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau. Goodbye, Department of Education. DOGE will get really vicious with organizations like Planned Parenthood, which averages approximately $50 million a year in federal funding. Reproductive health for women is almost certainly taking that hit.

Musk will make headlines when he and Ramaswamy end the $535 million federal support for public radio and TV. They actually called that “unauthorized spending,” even though Congress authorized it. 

Musk says his DOGE will inflict hardship. Many Americans will lose their jobs, both inside the government and outside—the government contracts with many companies, and when DOGE decides those contracts are not going to be honored, the losses will be severe in some quarters. Add to that the rising consumer prices that are widely predicted from Trump’s tariffs on Canada, Mexico and China (and possibly everyone else), and the American lifestyle may be in for the biggest shock since 1929.

It is astonishing that, in a roaring Biden-Harris economy that is benefiting literally every class of Americans, Trump garnered more votes than Harris and will throw wrenches into many of the gears of that economy, if Musk succeeds. 

Dr. Tom H. Hastings is coordinator of conflict resolution BA/BS degree programs and certificates at Portland State University.

Some More, Please: First Show Remounted at Community Center by Lucky Penny

Napa’s Lucky Penny Community Arts Center opened just about 10 years ago with a production of Lionel Barts’ classic musical, Oliver! The musical adaptation of Charles Dickens’ Oliver Twist has long been an audience favorite since its debut at a Southwest London theater in 1960.

It’s a big show, in many ways, and not the lightest of entertainments, but its requirement for a large cast of young performers makes it an ideal choice for community theaters, as all those kids ensure ticket sales to their parents, grandparents, neighbors and friends. Lucky Penny’s remount runs through Dec. 22.

The show opens at a London workhouse for orphans with “Food, Glorious Food” as we’re introduced to the young Oliver Twist (Kiernan Upton Albright). A bit of a rapscallion, he’s soon sold off to funeral home proprietors the Sowerberrys (Andrew Moore, LC Arisman). He runs away and runs into the Artful Dodger (Leo Tudiscso, alternating with Luke Lawrence), who introduces him to Fagin (Dennis O’Brien), the leader of a group of young “entrepreneurs.”

Pinched on his first outing with the boys, he ends up in the home of Mr. Brownlow. Concerned that he might give up their location and the nature of their “business,” the villainous Bill Sykes (Skyler King) demands he be retrieved. The maternal Nancy (Sarah Lundstrum), paramour to Bill, agrees to assist, but soon regrets it.

The large scale of the show, and the large cast (25% of the house size), makes it a challenging choice for a 99-seat theater. The intimate space makes technical errors like a malfunctioning parasol, a flapping body mic and a molting beard more distracting. Compacted chase scenes remove tension. Characters who should be played BIG are done with restraint.

Some of these are offset by the energy and talent of the cast. Upton Albright is a perfect, angelic-voiced Oliver, and Tudisco makes for a playful Dodger. Among the adults, Lundstrom stood out with a nuanced performance as the doomed Nancy. Director Stacy Arriaga’s youthful ensemble acquits itself quite nicely in several of the Alex Gomez-choreographed numbers.

Musical tracks are utilized, which subtracts from some of the show’s majesty, but is understandable considering the limitation of space. You still get to hear the vocals of such classics as “Consider Yourself,” “As Long as He Needs Me” and a perfectly lovely rendition of “Who Will Buy?” delivered well.

Lucky Penny’s Oliver! may not have scope, but it certainly has heart.

‘Oliver!’ runs through Dec. 22 at the Lucky Penny Community Arts Center. 1758 Industrial Way, Napa. Thurs, 7pm; Fri-Sat, 8pm; Sun, 2pm. $24–$47. 707.266.6305. luckypennynapa.com.

Going Solo Again: Ian Hinkley’s Latest Musical Offering

Sonoma-based musician Ian Hinkley has a new solo album, The Last Cool Summer, which dropped on all digital platforms on Nov. 22. 

If Hinkley’s name sounds familiar, one may have previously seen or heard him as the front person/brainchild behind local bands like Bumblin’ Bones, Cavemen, Paulie Hips and the Childbearers, The Shakedown Choir, Punchface Sally and more. 

The Last Cool Summer is Hinkley’s second solo venture. This time around, he sought to make a purposeful and “guerilla-style” recording, with many songs being sung straight into a Sure SM58 microphone, often in one take. We spoke with Hinkley about the album and the process of bringing his vision to life.

Bohemian: Listening back to some of the Bumblin’ Bones albums and then playing The Last Cool Summer, there are definite parallels, although I would say this latest album is much more atmospheric and layered. Were you conscious of going for a different sound this time around?

Ian Hinkley: The main difference, I think, was that when I was putting together albums for the Bumblin’ Bones, it was often taken from songs written for, or during, performing. I tend to think of recorded music and live music as feeding two very different parts of people. Live music activates your body, while recorded music activates your mind. 

The first solo record I made was at the height of the pandemic (Guy Wonder, 2022), and grew out of knowing that I may never play these songs in front of people. I know how I sing on a stage is different than how I sing in a booth, and it freed me to not worry about how I would recreate the sounds in public.

B: Is it fair to call this album a little more melodic or ephemeral? The production has a real layered yet intriguing use of “noise” and various instrumentation. What was your thought process there? I’m guessing Takeshi Lewis (a local sound maven who mixed the album) had something to do with this different sound?

IH: It’s basically the same answer as before. I think it’s very fair to notice that I tried to add more melodic layers into these songs. Takeshi actually received all of the tracks fully recorded and didn’t add any instrumentation or ambient sounds to them. His task was purely mixing and mastering. But I will absolutely credit him with homing in on an atmospheric mood that binds the album together. 

Whether it’s a song like “Sleeping Sack” that is just me playing and singing in one take into a single mic, or “Marnie’s Song,” which is synth-heavy with three electric guitar tracks and full instrumentation, there is an open and dreamy sound that Takeshi created that binds the album into a sound that doesn’t feel like it’s all over the place but feels apiece.

B: You said you’re looking to get a band together to play live with this new stuff. Can you mention who you’re reaching out to? Will the new band just do this new stuff or some Bumblin’ Bones too?

IH: The shows I’ve played since “going solo” have been Ian Hinkley & Friends shows, which generally use musicians from the Bumblin’ Bones and some of the other bands I’ve been in. These shows do combine new songs as well as old Bumblin’ Bones songs and are usually a set of me sitting down at a One-Man-Band set-up I’ve created where I attached a keyboard atop a bass drum and attached a tambourine to a high hat stand, and I play guitar behind that while I try to add as much instrumentation as I can on my own. 

Then, over the course of the night, I’ll bring up more musicians to fill out the sound and make it a rock show like the old days. The songs on The Last Cool Summer have not been part of that show yet, and I’m putting together a new version of that show to incorporate these songs, too.

Listen to Ian Hinkley’s music via linktr.ee/ianhinkley.

Gifts for the Culturenaut

Culturenauts are those people who define themselves by their refined tastes and are so far ahead on the cultural curve that it’s a literal pain in the neck to look back at us plebes trying to keep up. 

Consequently, giving them gifts is an anxiety-ridden exercise in futility, judgment and disappointment. Merry Christmas.

Fortunately, some marketing genius created the gift card, which puts the onus of actually choosing a gift for that resident culturenaut on them. One only needs to choose where to get the card. Start here:

Book ’em, Danno

Choosing a book by its cover is no longer a problem. One can make a giftee do it with a gift card to Copperfield’s Books. An indie bookstore with nine locations in the tri-county area, they will appeal to a culturenaut’s inherent pro-labor, anti-Amazon sentiments while complimenting their conspicuous literary leanings. Will it be the latest Murakami or Miranda July’s All Fours? Who cares? One’s part is done. They may have some more eggnog. copperfieldsbooks.com.

Bonus: Russian River Books & Letters—a café-adjacent charmer in the heart of Guerneville, this bookstore deserves those dollars. booksletters.com

Wine Time

Any time is a fine time for wine, except when Mr. Merlot Mansplainer, “self-trained sommelier,” opens his purple-stained gob to tell us what we should be “looking for” in our glasses. (Dude, I’m looking for wine, and it’s right here, so shaddup already.) By gifting this type of gift card for a local wine experience, one is simultaneously saying, “I know you like wine, and I defer to your literal good tastes.” Everyone wins. 

Favorites in this regard include Petaluma’s La Dolce Vita Wine Lounge, which offers gift cards and a monthly wine club membership of beautifully curated selections. ldvwine.com.

For the oenophile with a taste for the boutique, Region Wine Bar at The Barlow in Sebastopol is the ultimate gift destination. With 50 wines on rotation from small Sonoma County producers—many without tasting rooms—it’s a rare opportunity to sip the rare find or emerging brand. Gift cards here unlock curated flights, by-the-glass pours and insider access to local micro-producers. drinkregion.com.

Bonus: Sonoma’s Gloria Ferrer, purveyors of fine sparkling wines, offers ‘digital gift cards’ online in $25, $50 or $100 denominations. gloriaferrer.com.

Cinema Claus

For the cinephile who already has everything everywhere all at once, Rialto Cinemas gift cards are the perfect plot twist. Available in any amount starting at $20, these cards cover tickets, popcorn and even wine—a triple feature of joy. Redeemable online or at the Sebastopol box office, it’s the easiest way to wrap up the magic of the big screen. One may give the gift of cinematic escapes, from arthouse gems to buttery indulgence. rialtocinemas.com.

Bonus: Santa Rosa Cinemas, whose theaters include the Roxy, Airport Stadium and Summerfield theaters, also offers gift cards at santarosacinemas.com/GiftCards.

Merry Music

A Green Music Center gift card will hit all the right notes for the music lover in one’s life. Part of the Sonoma State University campus in Rohnert Park, the venue is lauded as Sonoma County’s premier performing arts destination, offering live and online performances, which makes this a gift that can resonate far and wide. gmc.sonoma.edu.

Similarly, the Luther Burbank Center for the Arts makes gifting live performances relatively effortless, with certificates available online, by phone or in person. One may choose email for instant delivery or have them mailed—free of charge—to themself or directly to a recipient for a seamless, sonic surprise. lutherburbankcenter.org.

Bonus: Jazz venue Blue Note Napa also offers gift cards at bluenotejazz.com/napa for those who prefer their ‘White Christmas’ with a dash of blue.

The Female Gaze of Photographer Kristen Demai

This story links to the cover story, forming a partnered pair. Both stories roll within a generational sea change in sexual mores. 

The cover story treats the massification of sex photo/video platform OnlyFans. And this companion treats the normalization of the sexy photo shoot. The tide has gone out, the landscape has changed, and everyone and their mother is doing fun and racy “boudoir shoots.”

To learn a bit more about the form and appeal of these shoots, I approached high-tone boudoir photographer Kristen Demai—ex-belly dancer and married mother of two.

Interview arranged, we met at Petaluma Tiki Bar Kapu over tropical drinks, under sunset lights. Demai had in tow her model-muse, a trad-wife sex-kitten named Brittney Leeanne.

As one reads, open kciboudier.com to see some, well, spreads. They are staged high-end hotel rooms, dirty bars, laundry rooms and grassy green pastures.

CH: Brittney, I wouldn’t guess it from your pin-up physique, but you had body-image issues following a toxic relationship and a body-changing medical disorder.

BL: I used boudoir photography with Kristen as a tool to rebuild my self-esteem, my self-worth and my self-love. I saw the progression across the shoots of how much I was healing. It’s a really liberating way of getting back to your core self.

KD: Early on in my career—10, 15 years ago—I learned that many women were doing this only for themselves—with no intention to share.

CH: Kristen, why do you choose to do this work?

KD: Growing up as a girl, you get mixed messages. You’re told you can do and be anything—and you are told that you can’t do this or that. Women and girls are judged in such a sexually charged way—the male gaze, I mean. I just hated the way society’s ideas and standards of beauty were imposed on my friends that I thought were so pretty but made to feel less than.

I rebel against what society pushes onto me—and I don’t want other people to feel that.

CH: So you don’t bring your own ideas of what is and isn’t sexy?

KD: I have no judgments. It’s all about what you feel sexy in—lacy lingerie, an old elephant printed tank top or a mumu.

CH: It sounds like a beautiful process—before intimacy, emotional safety…

Hire a shoot. For a partner, for a lover or for oneself, this Christmas, give the gift of nudes. KCI shoots digital but can print boudoir photos on glossy, metal or framed canvas. Visit kciboudier.com.

Free Will Astrology: Week of Dec. 11

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ARIES (March 21-April 19): If you were walking down the street and spied a coin lying on the sidewalk, would you bend down to pick it up? If you’re like most people, you wouldn’t. It’s too much trouble to exert yourself for an object of such little value. But I advise you to adopt a different attitude during the coming weeks. Just for now, that stray coin might be something like an Umayyad gold dinar minted in the year 723 and worth over $7 million. Please also apply this counsel metaphorically, Aries. In other words, be alert for things of unexpected worth that would require you to expand your expectations or stretch your capacities.

TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Taurus writer Randall Jarrell compared poets to people who regularly stand in a meadow during a thunderstorm. If they are struck by the lightning of inspiration five or six times in the course of their careers, they are good poets. If they are hit a dozen times, they are great poets. A similar principle applies in many fields of endeavor. To be excellent at what you do, you must regularly go to where the energy is most electric. You’ve also got to keep working diligently on your skills so that when inspiration comes calling, you have a highly developed ability to capture it in a useful form. I’m bringing this up now, Taurus, because I suspect the coming weeks will bring you a slew of lightning bolts.

GEMINI (May 21-June 20): My upcoming novels epitomize the literary genre known as magical realism. In many ways, the stories exhibit reverence for the details of our gritty destinies in the material world. But they are also replete with wondrous events like talking animals, helpful spirits and nightly dreams that provide radical healing. The characters are both practical and dreamy, earthy and wildly imaginative, well-grounded and alert for miracles. In accordance with your astrological potential, I invite you to be like those characters in the coming months. You are primed to be both robustly pragmatic and primed for fairy-tale-style adventures.

CANCER (June 21-July 22): In December 1903, the Wright Brothers flew a motorized vehicle through the sky for the first time in human history. It was a very modest achievement, really. On the first try, Orville Wright was in the air for just 12 seconds and traveled 120 feet. On the fourth attempt that day, Wilbur was aloft for 59 seconds and 852 feet. I believe you’re at a comparable stage in the evolution of your own innovation. Don’t minimize your incipient accomplishment. Keep the faith. It may take a while, but your efforts will ultimately lead to a meaningful advancement. (PS: Nine months later, the Wrights flew their vehicle for over five minutes and traveled 2.75 miles.)

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): During the rest of 2024, life’s generosity will stream your way more than usual. You will be on the receiving end of extra magnanimity from people, too. Even the spiritual realms might have extra goodies to bestow on you. How should you respond? My suggestion is to share the inflowing wealth with cheerful creativity. Boost your own generosity and magnanimity. Just assume that the more you give, the more you will get and the more you will have. (PS: Do you know that Emily Dickinson poem with the line “Why Floods be served to us — in Bowls”? I suggest you obtain some big bowls.)

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): The term “cognitive dissonance” refers to the agitation we feel while trying to hold conflicting ideas or values in our minds. For example, let’s say you love the music of a particular singer-songwriter, but they have opinions that offend you or they engage in behavior that repels you. Or maybe you share many positions with a certain political candidate, but they also have a few policies you dislike. Cognitive dissonance doesn’t have to be a bad or debilitating thing. In fact, the ability to harbor conflicting ideas with poise and equanimity is a sign of high intelligence. I suspect this will be one of your superpowers in the coming weeks.

LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): “Amazing Grace” is a popular hymn recorded by many pop stars, including Aretha Franklin, Elvis Presley and Willie Nelson. Created in 1773, it tells the story of a person who concludes that he has lived an awful life and now wants to repent for his sins and be a better human. The composer, John Newton, was a slave trader who had a religious epiphany during a storm that threatened to sink his ship in the Atlantic Ocean. God told him to reform his evil ways, and he did. I presume that none of you reading this horoscope has ever been as horrible a person as Newton. And yet you and I, like most people, are in regular need of conversion experiences that awaken us to higher truths and more expansive perspectives. I predict you will have at least three of those transformative illuminations in the coming months. One is available now, if you want it.

SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): “Thinking outside the box” is an American idiom. It means escaping habitual parameters and traditional formulas so as to imagine fresh perspectives and novel approaches. While it’s an excellent practice, there is also a good alternative. We can sometimes accomplish marvels by staying inside the box and reshaping it from the inside. Another way to imagine this is to work within the system to transform the system—to accept some of the standard perspectives but play and experiment with others. For example, in my horoscope column, I partially adhere to the customs of the well-established genre, but also take radical liberties with it. I recommend this approach for you in 2025.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): I don’t recommend burning wood to heat your home. Such fires generate noxious emissions harmful to human health. But hypothetically speaking, if you had no other way to get warm, I prefer burning ash and beech wood rather than, say, pine and cedar. The former two trees yield far more heat than the latter two, so you need less of them. Let’s apply this principle as we meditate on your quest for new metaphorical fuel, Sagittarius. In the coming months, you will be wise to search for resources that provide you with the most efficient and potent energy.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): The world’s longest tunnel is over 35 miles long. It’s the Gotthard Base Tunnel in the Swiss Alps. I’m guessing the metaphorical tunnel you’ve been crawling your way through lately, Capricorn, may feel that extensive. But it’s really not. And here’s even better news: Your plodding travels will be finished sooner than you imagine. I expect that the light at the end of the tunnel will be visible any day now. Now here’s the best news: Your slow journey through the semi-darkness will ultimately yield rich benefits no later than your birthday.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Would you like to avoid wilting and fading away in January, Aquarius? If so, I recommend that during the coming weeks, you give your best and brightest gifts and express your wildest and most beautiful truths. In the new year, you will need some downtime to recharge and revitalize. But it will be a pleasantly relaxing interlude—not a wan, withered detour—if in the immediate future you unleash your unique genius in its full splendor.

PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): My treasured Piscean advisor, Letisha, believes it’s a shame so many of us try to motivate ourselves through abusive self-criticism. Are you guilty of that sin? I have done it myself on many occasions. Sadly, it rarely works as a motivational ploy. More often, it demoralizes and deflates. The good news, Pisces, is that you now have extra power and savvy to diminish your reliance on this ineffectual tactic. To launch the transformation, I hope you will engage in a focused campaign of inspiring yourself through self-praise and self-love.

Homework: What will you revive, rejuvenate and renovate in 2025? Newsletter.FreeWillAstrology.com

Winter Studios, Route 1, Broadway & Maria Muldaur

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Sausalito

Annual Winter Open Studios

It’s time to get ready to celebrate the pre-holiday season with a weekend of all things art at the ICB ART 56th Annual Winter Open Studios on Dec. 7-8. From 11am to 5pm, the historic ICB Building in Sausalito will open its doors to more than 100 artists showing off their original works to the world. This show offers a rare chance to experience a wide variety of art and artists, all of whom have been hard at work mastering their craft in many mediums, including sculpture, painting, photography, fashion and oh so much more. Among the featured artists is Nicki Adani and her “Taking Flight” installation. The Winter Open Studios event invites visitors to connect directly with artists and see their creative processes in action. Seasoned art collectors and first-time visitors alike are encouraged to come on out to take in this local show and maybe even discover new works while engaging with Sausalito’s thriving art scene. The event is free and open to the public. For more information, visit icbart.com. The ICB Building is located at 480 Gate 5 Rd., Sausalito.

Point Reyes Station

Gallery Route One (and Only)

This month, Gallery Route One in Point Reyes Station is showcasing four new exhibits that delve into contemporary themes of identity, nature and environmental concerns (a very on-the-nose theme for a West Marin exhibition). On Saturday, Dec. 7, the gallery will open its doors to a collection of artworks that are designed to captivate and inspire just in time for the holiday season. In the Center Gallery, two emerging artists from Gallery Route One’s Fellowship Program will present thought-provoking pieces that explore self-image, personal transformation and the natural world. This includes Taryn Möller Nicoll’s installation, Dreamgirlz, and Sofia Gonzalez’s Accumulations. In the Project Space of Gallery Route One, Jeff Downing will present The Grand Façade: A Reverence for Water, while in the Annex Gallery will be EA Zappa’s For the Birds series. Art lovers, environmental advocates and those simply looking for a bit of beauty this holiday season may come out to Point Reyes Station to see these works that are meant to engage, entertain and potentially stoke some climate change (the good kind). For more information, visit galleryrouteone.org.

Sonoma & Marin

Broadway Holiday

The holiday season may be celebrated in the North Bay with Transcendence Theatre Company’s Broadway Holiday, a star-studded show with a festive twist on the classic Broadway musical. This local theater company must have asked Santa for a showstopper jam-packed with Broadway veterans bringing New York to the North Bay. Broadway Holiday features an all-new mix of classic holiday tunes and Broadway numbers, all combined into one festive local production that is designed to dazzle its audience with vocals, choreography and plenty of holiday joy and good cheer. The ensemble includes Broadway’s Frozen and Wicked star, Alicia Albright, and Cirque du Soleil’s Ruby Lewis. Broadway Holiday will be staged at the Marin Theatre in Mill Valley Dec. 12 through 15, and at Sebastiani Theatre in Sonoma Dec. 18 and 19. An additional matinee performance has been added at Sebastiani Theatre on Wednesday, Dec. 18. Tickets start at $30 at Marin Theatre and $31 at Sebastiani Theatre, with group discounts and VIP Gold tickets available for a premium experience. For more information or to purchase tickets, visit MarinTheatre.org or Transcendencetheatre.org.

Santa Rosa

Holiday Swing Santa, Baby

The one and only Maria Muldaur is bringing some festive beats to Sonoma this year with her upcoming performance of Holiday Swing. Muldar’s show is designed to be a little bit upbeat and a whole lot hip, perfect for those who want to kick off the holiday season with some moving and grooving to more than just jingle bells. For this show, Muldaur will be joined by Jazzabelle Quintet, a group of Bay Area jazz players whose performance is meant to add some serious swing to the season. Just like Holiday Swing Santa, Muldaur is ready to deliver her musical gifts straight to the eardrums. This Holiday Swing performance promises no sappy, sentimental holiday songs—just a few handpicked gems from Maria’s favorite jazz and blues artists that are designed to keep the audience tapping along and swinging to the beat all night long. The show will run from 7:30 to 10pm, Saturday, Dec. 7 at The California. Tickets are $25 in advance and $30 at the door; they can be found at caltheatre.com. The California Theatre is located at 528 Seventh St. in Santa Rosa.

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Free Will Astrology: Week of Dec. 11

Free Will Astrology: Week of Dec. 11
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Winter Studios, Route 1, Broadway & Maria Muldaur

Sausalito Annual Winter Open Studios It’s time to get ready to celebrate the pre-holiday season with a weekend of all things art at the ICB ART 56th Annual Winter Open Studios on Dec. 7-8. From 11am to 5pm, the historic ICB Building in Sausalito will open its doors to more than 100 artists showing off their original works to the world....
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