Hello. I'm Willow.

Hi, beautiful beings!

I'm that quiet, nerdy, artsy, bookish kid in the corner of the classroom that you remember when you were in your fifth grade, that underperforming misfit in class whom you wouldn't know 
about their genius.

I'm an enigma, or as someone who once said to me, a rare wildflower one would not find until they'd hiked a distance through rugged terrains.

For those who care about factoids like these, I'm an INTP, a "loyalist" enneagram archetype, a Gemini sun with a Taurus moon; a queer non-binary femme who is on the autistic spectrum (and 
was not diagnosed as such until I was 18), who was considered a gifted child at age 3 but I began flunking school by the time I was 10 (I hated school).

I think I have always been a born rebel and a free spirit.

In the 21st century, I have been a dropout, then a serial entrepreneur, then a minister, then an activist and community organizer, and then back to entrepreneurship and art, as well as 
being a graduate student.

I have lived in the inner-city neighborhoods of Portland for 19 years, since before Portland was a cool place to be. Now I live in the woods far from any city, spoiling two cats.

+++ Art +++

* medium: watercolor, ink, pencil, mixed-media, found art.
* current projects: gallery curation, promoting emerging artists. 

Oddly enough, I absolutely hated art and craft when I was little. I felt it was boring and tedious, and I hated the mess and the smells of various things (paints, crayons, clay, etc.).

When I was in third grade, I was in a classroom just when the school was over and recess was starting. A few boys were throwing something around, laughing and screaming at one another. Then 
I felt something hit my face. As I was on my way home, I realized my eyesight was weird. Stuff looked like doubles, and kind of blurry. I went home and my mom took me to an optometrist at a 
nearby contact lens shop. He ran a few tests and found out that my left eye was slashed with the object. Very fortunately I did not lose my sight, but it took me over a month wearing an eye 
patch over my left eye, looking at the world through only one eye, until the doctor thought I had sufficiently recovered.

The eye patch came off, but my formerly exceptionally great eyesight (I could see a watertower that was five miles away, from the 8th floor condo we used to live in) began deteriorating 
over time. By the time I was out of high school, I was full-blown myopic. Now I cannot read a 10-point character half a foot away.

Over time, I began perceiving the world through subtle nuances in different shades of colors. Though I could no longer see or discern details and lines and edges, and I lost my sense of 
depth and distance recognition, I developed a keen sense of colors, shades and tones. I think this is very much well suited for a watercolor artist.

I picked up fine art when I was in middle school, perhaps as a way to find an escape from the very rigid and competitive academic environment I was in at the time. I even served as the 
president of the school fine art club for a year. In my teenage years, I visited many art museums -- famous ones as well as obscure and less-known ones. Museums were some of my favorite 
hangouts -- I had annual passes to the Seattle Art Museum and the Bellevue Art Museum. During my junior and senior years of high school (which was an arts magnet school that specialized in 
all sorts of arts), I received an excellent art training from working artists who were teachers at our school.

After I graduated from high school in 1994, however, I abruptly took a break from art. I never picked up a paintbrush for the following 13 years. My interests sort of shifted, I gave up on 
my application for the Cornish College of the Arts and the Art Institute of Seattle, and by that time it was too late to apply for anything except a few local community colleges. I attended 
South Seattle Community College (today's South Seattle College) for three years and there I studied journalism and newspaper production, something that was becoming obsolete at the time. 
Even then, in retrospect, my artistic eyes played important roles in designing a newspaper. I developed a love of typefaces, as well. I also had a bit of training in photojournalism as 
well, and I would love to venture into that field when I have a lot of money to invest in equipment.

Between 2007 and 2016, I took up modeling on-and-off, initially by request from an acquaintance who was working on an art project. I've modeled for several photographers since then, as well 
as for a number of uninstructed figure drawing groups. I am no longer modeling actively, but I am open to collaborating with photographers and artists on a project that I have on my mind 
(for more, check out my fine art page). I am an artist at heart, and I saw modeling as another outlet for creativity and self-expression, as well as to explore the facets of myself that are 
not usually very openly expressed. I was never in this for money, and I wasn't interested in commercial or fashion modeling.

In 2007, I resumed my art. It was a fresh start for me, and I did not necessarily have perfect tools or resources for this. Yet, I began showing in the spring of 2008, and I have exhibited 
ever since. I have held two solo shows, and was a featured artist in an exhibit at a gallery. I have shown in several juried shows as well as in invitationals.

In 2018, I founded the Preslar Gallery (renamed Preslar Art Initiatives), which I curated and directed until 2020. Due to COVID-19, the last exhibit was held in June 2020 in both Second Life and in OS Grid metaverses!  

+++ Politics +++

* ideological tendencies: Libertarian (Libertarian Socialism, Mutualism), Georgism, Distributism, Cypherpunk
* influences and inspirations: Emma Goldman, Voltairine de Cleyre, Hannah Arendt, Pierre-Joseph Proudhon, Henry George, Robert Nisbet, Kevin Carson, G.K. Chesterton, Timothy C. May


My only political position is to promote anything that leads to more liberty for all - especially the marginalized and underdog populations. And my highest political priority is to uphold 
the human rights, economic rights, and social rights of all. This is the only standard by which I judge all policy matters.

In general, I am a mutualist and libertarian socialist in orientation, influenced also by the Catholic thoughts of subsidiarity and distributism, Georgist economic theory, and 
anarcha-feminist analysis -- and inspired by a diverse group of thinkers including Robert Nisbet, Hannah Arendt, Emma Goldman, and G.K. Chesterton. I envision a decentralized post-state 
world order in which sovereignty resides in individuals within a context of organic, liberated human society. I reject the concentration of powers into smaller and more remote hands, 
whether they are economic, political, or informational powers.

+++ Faith +++

* theological tendencies: Christian Universalism, New Thought, feminist theology, theology of liberation
* theological influences: Baptist, Pentecostal, Anglican, New Thought, Jewish, Neo-Pagan

I'm one of those rare and odd people these days, who is "religious not spiritual." In fact, I'm wary of those who claim to be "spiritual not religious" since they lack structure and 
discipline, accordingly, anything goes and their emotions become the ultimate arbiter. I feel this is very limiting, when the buck stops with yourself and has nothing transcendent beyond 
your feelings, desires, or passions.

As someone who is neurodivergent, I did not possess some of the basic human instincts such as conscience, sense of right and wrong, and empathy as a young child. I was a monster that was my 
parents' and teachers' worst nightmare. Still I do not fully understand (or capable of dealing with) the vagaries and nuances of human life and this remains one of my greatest frustrations. 
Fundamentalist Christianity provided me, at the onset of adolescence, the much needed system of understanding morality and ethics, as well as the structures upon I built my values and 
behaviors.

I've explored theologies, doctrines, and traditions of many faiths since I was maybe 10 or 11 years old. Those topics intrigued me because they gave me a window to learn why people think 
and behave certain ways. Eventually I have studied at an Evangelical liberal arts college and a seminary. Theology (which I usually spell thexlogy these days) still is my interest area, as 
well as sociology and history of religions.

At various points in my life, I was affiliated with, or in the process of joining (and left before joining), a Christian Reformed church, the Jehovah's Witnesses, a fundamentalist Baptist 
church, several Pentecostal churches (of various sizes, ranging from a start-up Assemblies of God congregation that met at someone's living room to one of the largest megachurches in the 
Pacific Northwest), Reform Judaism, Unitarian Universalist churches, United Church of Christ, Metropolitan Community Church, the Anglican/Episcopal Church, a number of Neo-Pagan 
communities, and a Unity church.

But oddly enough, I was never raised religious; in fact, both of my parents were anti-religion and secular. This might have worked in my favor because religion was never forced down my 
throat and my rebellious tendency found an outlet in church instead of gangs or drug addiction. But I sure was a delinquent kid who spent lots of time in church (instead of studying hard 
and getting good grades!) and everyone except my parents thought I was this "good, impressive, religious teenager." Now I sort of feel sorry for this. I used to think of my parents as tools 
of Satan.

There was also a time when I was an ordained priest in a breakaway Catholic denomination (hence in a valid but illicit apostolic succession). I survived for about two and a half years. 
Around that time, I was also a Benedictine oblate affiliated with an oblate community at an Episcopal church.

I am ethically opposed to self-improvement and self-actualization (hedonism and exaltation of self), as well as those who peddle them (unethical merchants who prey on people's weaknesses 
often when they are vulnerable). Regardless of one's religious tradition, faith ought to be about transcending and conquering self to pursue that which is greater than the total sum of 
one's self -- from hence come the sense of vocation, purpose, and dedication.

+++ Scholarship and researches +++

* previously: Ocean Seminary College (feminist theology) - dropped out  

I am a renegade theologian, originally trained in Evangelical Protestant theological background, but along the way evolved through ecofeminism, queer and/or feminist theology, liberation 
theology, Catholic social teachings, and New Thought theology. My research interests include history of female leadership and evolution of 
its theology and praxis in the U.S., especially in the context of contemporary social and political trends.  

* currently: Christian Leaders Institute - on the 3-year Diploma of Divinity program 

So far I have completed a Certificate in Chaplaincy, and is about to have earned enough credits for the 2-year Diploma of Ministry (as of February 2024). This is more of a practical ministry training rather than a scholarly program. The Institute, while officially a non-denominational institution, it is decidedly Calvinist in orientation, with support from Christian Reformed Church.   

+++ Entrepreneurship +++

For the entirely of my adulthood, I have been a "necessity entrepreneur," who has tried a wide variety of microenterprise endeavors for the sake of subsistence. While I have no M.B.A. and 
no corporate background, I have become known for my uncanny knack for business. In 2016, I founded Limeadestand Works (https://limeadestandworks.com), a brand strategy and brand 
communication management firm geared specifically toward independent creatives and solopreneurs in the Greater Portland, Oregon metropolitan region.

+++ Odds and ends +++

I have been a vegan since 1995. I am also a devoted bicyclist with a trusty U.S.-made Raleigh mountain bike, which takes me pretty much everywhere.

I was also a small-time cryptocurrency miner producing Gridcoin. Gridcoin miners contribute to the advancement of science and medicine by contributing excess computing power for scientific 
research. At one point, Gridcoin was almost similar in value to Dogecoin, before Elon Musk took notice of DOGE and therefore the price went up from a third of a penny to as much as 70 cents. 

I am not a fan of shitcoins and company tokens. Nano (XNO) is I think the best in terms of technology and usability. 

Another project I was following and participating in was (now long defunct) Bitnation, which is a working proof-of-concept in a blockchain-based mutualist panarchy (read my politics page for more on mutualist 
panarchism, if you're curious).

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Last updated: Feb. 16, 2024.