We have been working on a new plan for a new year for Who We Become in 2015, but they aren’t ready just yet. In the meanwhile, however, we’ve been missing our weekly posts, so we are back to posting weekly images. My image for this week is the view out the window of a NJ Transit train – a common view when I visit my parents in NJ and head into NYC to see old friends. There is a fair amount of beauty out there, but it’s not always easy to see it properly, which I hope I manage to convey here. Please click HERE to visit Who We Become and see new images from my dear friends.
Let Them Be Little (64)
This week’s Let Them Be Little is up! And sometimes, when you are little, you really need a nap. Actually, if you’re big you might need one too. Please click HERE to visit Let Them Be Little and see all the cuties on the blog this week.
Letters to Our Daughters (21)
I have been participating in a blog circle with some wonderful photographers who are also mothers of girls. Each month, we write a letter to our daughters to preserve thoughts and memories of this time in our lives. I treasure being able to do this for my girls and I love the chance to see the messages that my friends leave for their own daughters. Once you have read my letter, please follow continue on to see what Delania Waddell wrote to her daughter by clicking HERE.
Dear Avery and Alexa,
My lovely little girls. You have been so patient with me lately. I’ve been taking pictures of other people, and spending lots of time at home editing those photos. I haven’t been able to spend as much timing playing with you as we normally do. But it turns out that you two play so well together that you don’t seem to mind.
That isn’t to say that you don’t get on one another’s nerves. There are regular arguments about who gets to put in the last piece of the puzzle, whether the TV show you get to watch will be Octonauts or Jake, and whether the game of pretend will be Frozen-based again. You also disagree, repeatedly, about who is “bigger” – which is much too cute an argument for me to want to resolve.
I also will sometimes find you getting into a bit of trouble here and there. Climbing into the pantry to get candy hidden on top. Or when you decide that you, Avery, should “decorate” your sister with markers, so she is covered with dots on her face and body. Or when you sneak the iPad and go hide somewhere to play with it and I think you are off playing pretend once again.
I have to admit that sometimes I am a little jealous of your relationship. You two are always having fun together and each has the other to be her partner in crime. But more than that, I have noticed lately that you have been taking care of one another – especially you, Avery, of your little sister. If Alexa is scared, because she woke up and I wasn’t there, or because there is a scary villain in a movie, you will hold her and tell her that she is ok. Afterwards, you will tell me proudly that you took care of her and it fills my heart with love and pride.
I hope you will have fun together and take care of one another forever.
love,
Mama
Who We Become (hiatus 1)
We have been working on a new plan for a new year for Who We Become in 2015, but they aren’t ready just yet. In the meanwhile, however, we’ve been missing our weekly posts, so we are back to posting weekly images. Please click HERE to visit Who We Become and see new images from my dear friends.
My image was taken last week down at Lake Washington. My high-contrast black and white processing was influenced by the photographer, Cole Thompson, whom I was lucky to meet back in September. If you haven’t seen his work, I highly recommend checking it out.
Let Them Be Little (63)
My girl loves her noodles. Please head over to Let Them Be Little to see her and all the other littles by clicking HERE.
Let Them Be Little (62)
This week’s Let Them Be Little is up! We had a lot of fun playing with friends at brunch earlier this week. It’s so nice when the kids are so happy to play together that the “grown-ups” get to have a conversation (and even a bloody mary!). Please check out all the littles on Let Them Be Little by clicking HERE.
Let Them Be Little (61)
This week’s Let Them Be Little is up! My girls were sporting their new Let Them Be Little shirts (they are selling them at Zara) on a recent trip to the playground in Madison Park. I’m not usually a fan of graphics on clothes in photos, but for these shirts I made an exception. 😉 Please click HERE to visit Let Them Be Little and see all the cuties on the blog.
Let Them Be Little (60)
This week’s Let Them Be Little is up on the blog. My image comes from a mid-70s October day on the pumpkin patch, where dad was put to work. Please click HERE to see all the kids today over on Let Them Be Little!
Let Them Be Little (59)
This week’s Let Them Be Little is up! We recently went to pick apples – one of my favorite fall activities. Of course, Paul talked me out of getting as many apples as I would have liked, so we have eaten them all already. I tried to be ok with letting my kids be kids while we were there, though – Avery was more interested in swinging from the side view mirror than posing for me on the cute vintage truck. 😉 Please click HERE to visit Let Them Be Little and see all the littles this week.
Letters to Our Daughters (20)
I have been participating in a blog circle with some wonderful photographers who are also mothers of girls. Each month, we write a letter to our daughters to preserve thoughts and memories of this time in our lives. I treasure being able to do this for my girls and I love the chance to see the messages that my friends leave for their own daughters. Once you have read my letter, please follow continue on to see what Jennifer Vititoe wrote to her daughter by clicking HERE.
Dear Avery and Alexa,
Hey look, it’s us! The whole family! We went apple picking recently with Uncle Julius and Aunt Cristina (plus Max-the-Dog). Julius was nice enough to take this picture of us. We don’t have enough pictures of the four of us together, and I love them even if I am not necessarily looking my best, because I love our family the most of anything in the whole wide world.
But most of the pictures I am going to use in this letter are actually a few weeks old. Late this summer, we bought a butterfly garden kit. I sent away for the caterpillars and we received a small cup in the mail with 5 of them and a weird peanut butter type substance that served as their food. They ate and ate, doubled in size about everyday, and finally each formed a chrysalis. Then the butterflies emerged and we had them in our house for a few days. You are supposed to release them after about 5 days, but we waited a little longer. You wanted to wait until Dad could be there before we released them, and I wanted there to be nice light, so we waited about a week later than we should have. Then I realized that they were mating like crazy and filling their garden with tiny little eggs (you can see the little pale blue eggs on the (quickly rotting) peach slices above). I was afraid that they would die on us, but we finally managed to release them. Avery, you wore your butterfly dress for the occasion.
Your Oma was in town and she got to participate. 🙂
It was so cool to get to see how well you did, treating the butterflies gently, and to see your expressions. You each took turns, reaching into the garden and bringing out a butterfly. One by one, they flew away. 
I know that it is a bit of a silly metaphor, but I think of you girls and how you are my butterflies. Just like them, you will probably be ready to fly away before I am quite ready. In fact, we were supposed to move the butterflies from the little cup into the big garden as soon as they had formed their chrysalis. But we procrastinated, like I usually do, and I was in denial. The instructions said the butterflies would take 7-10 days to emerge, but it was wrong – ours were faster. Or was it that I counted wrong, that my sense of the time was different? In any case, those first two butterflies emerged still in that tiny cup instead of in the big garden. And there we were, running about on a hectic weekday morning, trying to get you ready for school, only to be surprised by the sight of a butterfly in that tiny container. The big change had occurred and we were too caught up in the day-to-day to realize. We had to move them all right away, and emerging into that tiny container might have damaged the wings of one butterfly, which were just a bit wonky. I don’t want that to happen to you. I know that my job right now is to keep you safe and growing, but I promise to make sure that you will also have room to spread your wings and fly. I love you.
love,
Mama



















