Hosting and Posting
Traditional self-promotion (especially social media) requires us to plan, produce and perform in isolation. But hosting? That’s different. Hosting is relational.
Hosting says: Here’s my home, my voice. The doors are open if you’d like to join me
What we CAN do
A reflection on enoughness, creativity, and learning to honor what we already hold.
Lately, as I build out The Listener’s Lodge—a home for slow art and shared wonder—I’ve been thinking about what it really means to offer what we have, rather than mourn what we lack.
![[Eli]zabeth Owens](http://images.squarespace-cdn.com/content/v1/603a629e0d3b11630e41b050/364b6bbe-7881-4c31-9ef4-7d106019bf10/Elizabeth+Owens+White+Logo.png?format=1500w)
![[Eli]zabeth Owens](http://images.squarespace-cdn.com/content/v1/603a629e0d3b11630e41b050/13097231-95ae-4613-b14f-b731639d4e60/Owens.png?format=1500w)
Traditional self-promotion (especially social media) requires us to plan, produce and perform in isolation. But hosting? That’s different. Hosting is relational.
Hosting says: Here’s my home, my voice. The doors are open if you’d like to join me