Christa Avampato's Blog, page 20
January 22, 2024
Second season of JoyProject podcast in the works

Season 2 of my podcast JoyProject is in the works!
In 2022, I started this podcast to ask people what brings them joy and share our conversations with listeners so they feel like they’re at the table with us. I booked the guests, recorded and edited all the episodes, and did all of the marketing and promotion. Joy was a big part of my daily care plan when I was going through cancer treatment during the pandemic in 2020–2021, and I wanted to create a podcast that amplified joy in its many forms and the healing it provides.
With my Masters program at University of Cambridge and my book launch this spring, I had to hold off on a second season of JoyProject because I didn’t have the time to do it well. Later this year, I’m going to release another season and I’m now in the story planning phase for it. I’m very excited to get back to it and can’t wait to find and meet the new guests.
I’d love for you to listen and let me know what you think. You can hear the first season here or anywhere you listen to podcasts: https://christaavampato.com/joyproject/
January 15, 2024
Can artists using AI inspire climate action?
If you’re at Davos this week or in London, there is groundbreaking art to experience.
At Davos this week, Istanbul-born artist Refik Anadol will present “Living Archive: Nature,” an installation featuring the Large Nature Model’s early artistic experimentations blending visuals, sound, and scent to champion the beauty and genius of nature. From February-April 2024, Anadol will present the first large-scale public exhibition at London’s Serpentine (North) in Kensington Gardens. If you are at Davos or in London, I hope you’ll go see these installations and let me know what you think. I wish I was there to experience them myself! They are not without their controversies, and I hope this generates useful dialogue to drive climate action.
The Large Nature Model is the world’s first open-source, generative AI model focused on Nature. It’s built from an extensive, ethically sourced natural world dataset. It is the core of DATALAND, Anadol’s future museum (that I think will be in L.A.) and Web3 platform dedicated to data visualization and AI art.
These installations are collaborative efforts, bringing together pioneers in diverse fields including the arts, scientific researchers, institutional archives, and advanced technology.
January 12, 2024
The generosity of people I’m interviewing for my dissertation in sustainability leadership

I’m astounded by the generosity of people I’m interviewing for my University of Cambridge dissertation in Sustainability Leadership. I’ve had or scheduled interviews with over 40 family office leaders, experienced climate communicators, and seasoned storytellers who have provided me with an incredible number and array of insights. I’m so grateful to all of them. My research question is how to use storytelling to connect family offices with climate entrepreneurs for mutual benefit and to safeguard the health of the planet as nature underpins half of our global GDP. If you or someone you know may be interested in talking to me, I’d love to chat. Let’s build a healthy world for all beings, together.
January 10, 2024
I’m having a book launch party for my novel, Emerson Page and Where the Light Leads

On Friday, May 31, 2024, I’ll be hosting a party in New York City (and online!) to celebrate the launch of my book, Emerson Page and Where the Light Leads / welcome summer / being alive. I’d absolutely LOVE to celebrate with wonderful YOU! We’ve all been through a lot in the last few years, the world is heavy, and I’d like to host a party filled with joy, love, laughter, light, food, drinks, music, dancing, gift bags, and general merriment. I’ll be doing a short reading from the book and brief conversation with a very special guest moderator that will also be available online for anyone who can’t make it to New York City for the party.
I’m still securing a venue and exact time. Save the dates will go out soon so if you’d like to know about the in-person or online details, please fill out this Google form below that takes about 10 seconds: https://forms.gle/53ACYqByeG7RQnbY9
Again, I’d absolutely love to celebrate with you!
January 8, 2024
Press release and sell sheet for Emerson Page and Where the Light Leads
Another exciting book launch milestone! The press release and sell sheet for my novel, Emerson Page and Where the Light Leads, are complete and being sent out with the galley (watermarked book manuscript) to media for review. Please feel free to share these with any media contacts whom you think would be interested. Pre-order links will be available next week, and I’ll share those as soon as I have them. Thank you to everyone for all the support. It takes a village, and I’m glad I’m with you.


January 7, 2024
#Sundaybuffet – January 7, 2024
Every Sunday on Instagram (@christarosenyc), I create a #Sundaybuffet post that highlights the top 10 things that inspired me, brought me joy and wonder, and made me laugh that week as part of my gratitude practice. I’d love to have you join me on Instagram and I’d love to know what inspires you. The images below are my #Sundaybuffet this week, along with a description, attribution, and the Instagram accounts for each one.
Here’s to being alive, healthy, and grateful in this beautiful world. I hope your Sunday is filled with love in all its wondrous forms.










@smithsonianmagazine @tzahi_finkelstein -Tzahi’s image of the happy turtle and dragon fly was short-listed for Wildlife Photographer of the Year People’s Choice Award at London’s @natural_history_museum
@USinterior @hikester_ –January 5th was National Bird Day. This photo of a bald eagle in Idaho was taken by Derek Butler, an Irish photographer. There was a record number of bald eagles observed at Lake Coeur d’Alene in Idaho in December – 409
January 5th was also my awesome niece, @lorelei_waldrep_08 ’s, 16th birthday. I remember the exact moment I first met her as a baby, and she is one of the reasons I’m so passionate about protecting the health of the planet—so she has a future to look forward to.
@Blacksun_awaken –Helena Bonham Carter is a queen. I love her perspective on the art in everything
@amyselwynphotographer –Stunning image “the journey felt enormous” is a collaboration between her imagination and AI platform @mid.journey. I’m really interested in learning more about AI for visual climate storytelling, and Amy’s work is a beacon of how to do this well.
@NewYorkerMag @rachsyme @the.irving.penn.foundation @vogue –Arctic explorer Peter Freuchen & his chic wife, Dagmar Cohn. Opposite attract!
@Sweatpantsandcoffee –How I like to spend every Sunday morning if I’m honest – in sweatpants, coffee in hand, and reading inspiring words. This post by writer and artist Nanea Hoffman about how we are born of stars is the crux of my @iamEmersonPage novels.
@Victoriaericksonwriter –Let love in!
@Secret.London @AshCrossan –Nothing better than a cozy pub on a blustery day. In the U.S., we don’t have the Sunday roast tradition but I’m going to start making Sunday roast in my Brooklyn apartment to make winter more joyful.
@tanner_smiths –shabby chic meets gangster-inspired décor at this speakeasy in midtown Manhattan. It looks unassuming from the outside and is a favorite spot of mine to meet up with friends. They’re all-in on the steampunk /1920s aesthetic I love. Their cocktail (and mocktail!) list as well as their food is top-notch. I was here this week for the launch of @fringepress, @bookpipeline’s latest project.
January 4, 2024
The good news from 2023

“Sometimes I think heaven is just a new pair of glasses…if I put on the better pair of glasses, I really notice what’s still working [well in this world].” ~Anne Lamott
As I look around at our world plagued by war, the climate crisis, and a seemingly endless stream of difficulties, I’ve been thinking a lot about Anne Lamott’s quote about putting on a better pair of glasses and operating from that lens. It doesn’t mean I’m ignoring the challenges and their scale; I’m seeing them alongside the progress, joy, and good news that’s alive in the world. A sampling of good news if you need a boost:
– Transplanted corals in the Caribbean showed a 98% survival rate
– Electric car sales are up 68% over last year
– The FDA approved the first medication for postpartum depression and the first over-the-counter birth control pills, improving access to necessary healthcare for millions of women. New treatments for Alzheimer’s, diabetes, and obesity were also released, along with the use of AI to find breast cancer at its earliest stages when it is often missed in traditional mammograms.
– The new President of Brazil has slowed deforestation by 48% in only the last 8 months
– A 10-year project turned Latin America’s largest landfill into a thriving mangrove forest
– A hole in the ozone layer is on track to completely disappear
– A universal flu vaccine begins trials
– Southern white rhinos are now back in the Congo after 17 years
January 3, 2024
Which job skills will be most needed in an AI-dominated world? The answer may surprise you.

With AI rapidly advancing, which skills will be most needed in the future? I guessed STEM. However, Christopher Pissarides Nobel Prize-winning economist and professor at The London School of Economics and Political Science (LSE) told Bloomberg that empathy, leadership, communication, and creative skills may be the ones most needed in an AI-dominated world and job market. This is because those skills are much more difficult for AI to replace, and they are skills needed to make AI useful and impactful. Humanities friends, rejoice!
Do you agree with Pissarides? How do you feel about the rise of artificial intelligence? What do you think the biggest opportunities and risks are with AI?
January 2, 2024
To create a joyful life, imagine these 3 versions of your career

What would you do if the work you do right now ended tomorrow? I’ve been thinking about this question since I was at University of Cambridge / Cambridge Institute for Sustainability Leadership (CISL) in December for my Masters in Sustainability Leadership program. My wonderful friend, Karen, in my cohort found me one morning to show me a Stanford TEDx talk titled 5 Steps to Designing the Life You Want by Bill Burnett that she felt I needed to see. She was right.
The whole talk is worth watching and the part that affected me most is a future visioning exercise called 3 lives. You imagine the next 5 years of your career in these scenarios:
1. Keep doing exactly what you’re doing now and it’s going to turn out great. What does great look like? In your career and life?
2. What would you do if what you’re doing right now ends tomorrow? How would your career and life change? What would that look and feel like?
3. Now for your wildcard plan. You have enough money to pursue any career you want, and no one would laugh at you for it. What would you do? What would your life and career look like then?
Which of these lives feels like the best path? Put aside the inner critic. Which one makes you happier and more fulfilled? For various reasons, that one may not be the one you choose to pursue but having a sense of these different paths helps us get unstuck.
Futures visioning is a part of my Cambridge dissertation so doing this exercise was a part of practicing what I preach. I sat down and sketched out these 3 lives for myself. It helped me uncover hidden ideas, interests, and desires I didn’t even know I had. It also helped me realize a few things that Bill speaks to in his talk:
1. The really interesting opportunities present themselves in our periphery. They are the things we didn’t see coming and didn’t plan for. Realizing this encourages me to be open to new people, information, learnings, ideas, and opportunities.
2. Bill encourages us to look at these three lives with our head and our heart. Decisions made from your emotions are just as valid, if not more so, than those made from our logic and reasoning. Emotions have much more wisdom than we give them credit for.
3. There isn’t one way to build a life or career. We can and will grow into different lives, and that can happen at any and every age. There is no timeline that we must follow. We can trust the timing of our lives and career. Things unfold in ways we don’t always understand. That’s okay. Be open, and be prepared to be lucky.
Let me know how it goes for you if you try this exercise. I’d love to hear about what you discover and I’d also love to support your journey.
Bill’s TEDx talk in here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SemHh0n19LA
He also has several books with Bill Evans on the topic of designing a joyful life and career: https://www.amazon.com/stores/Bill-Burnett/author/B01KVOW2RS?ref=ap_rdr&isDramIntegrated=true&shoppingPortalEnabled=true
January 1, 2024
How to use your front door to inspire your life in 2024

I decorated my front door for the new year with my 2024 word for the year, a Rumi quote I want to carry with me every day, and a handmade house blessing for my new apartment from my dear friend, Kelly Greenaur.
My word for 2024 — vulnerability
Instead of resolutions, I adopt a word for the year to guide my thoughts and actions, and I write out some of my wishes I hope the word helps me take. In 2023, my word was clarity and I did find more clarity in every area of my life. In 2024, my word is vulnerability. By embracing my own vulnerability and supporting others doing the same, I hope I can bridge the divides in our society, and between people and nature. By recognizing and naming my fears and concerns, I can alleviate them. I can only solve problems and challenges I’m willing to have. By recognizing and naming my hopes and dreams, I can realize them. I can only climb the mountains I’m willing to attempt.

Letting myself be vulnerable opens me up to experiences I need and want, and otherwise wouldn’t have. I don’t want to leave anything unsaid. I want to take more chances and risks, asking for what I want, explaining how I feel, and sharing what I believe. I’m excited to see who and what I’ll find on this adventure. I want to be open to the world, and whatever it has to show and teach me, even if that breaks me and cracks me open. With those cracks, more light will find its way in, as Rumi wrote and the late great Leonard Cohen sang.
Rumi
The Rumi quote, “Be a lamp, or a lifeboat, or a ladder. Help someone’s soul heal. Walk out of your house like a shepherd.”, is one I want to use this year to help heal others and the world. We have so much capacity to help each other through this life, and I want to make sure I use mine to the fullest. I’m hopeful the light I find by being more vulnerable will be light I can share with others.

A handmade house blessing
Kelly sent me this house blessing talisman for Christmas, along with a stitched bracelet and an ornament that says, “I wish you lived next door.” (Me, too, Kel!) They were made by two women — Dau Nan from Myanmar and Bina Biswa from Bhutan — who now live in Buffalo, New York and are part of Stitch Buffalo, a textile art center committed to empowering refugee and immigrant women through the sale of their handcrafted goods, inspiring creativity, inclusion, community education, and stewarding the environment through the re-use of textile supplies. These passions of helping people and the environment are ones Kelly and I share, and I’m so grateful for her friendship, love, and support.





Stitch Buffalo crafts. Photos by Christa Avampato.
I hope 2024 is everything you want and need it to be. This year will be turbulent, and holds opportunities for progress, joy, and love. Onward we go, together.