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Everyday Adventures

Everyday Adventures, Soul Searching

Sometimes You’ve Got to Plant a Few Seeds

A couple of months ago, the little man and I planted some sunflower seeds as a springtime project.  And with my brown thumb, I had every expectation that those little seeds we pushed into the compost would never see the light of day.  Their little clay pots got stuffed inside our shed where they did at least have a bit of shelter and sun.

I’d all but forgotten about them and then one day stepped into the shed to break out the lawnmower and to my great surprise, those things had sprouted like wildfire.  They quickly outgrew their tiny clay pots and we moved them into a big pot, one I felt sure they’d have plenty of breathing space in.

And they did.  Until now.  Now they are taller than my child and propped up with sticks trying desperately not to fall over.  They beg for a new even bigger pot and maybe even a small tree branch to keep them upright. Now we’re just wondering if any flowers will ever materialize.  If only it would stop raining and they could actually get, well, some sun.  I assume sunflowers like that.

All this interestingness sprouted from just a few tiny seeds.

Makes you wonder what we’re all capable of growing if we just take the time to sow a few seeds.

This post is part of a weekly photography challenge I’ve been doing (well, most weeks…) 52 Photos.
Monkey and Me on the Train
Everyday Adventures, Soul Searching

When a Picture Isn’t Worth 1000 Words

Over the course of the Little Monkey’s first two years, I took hundreds, maybe thousands of pictures.  But I’ve now realized that while I captured many moments in time and what they looked like, I didn’t capture the context.  And, really, to fully capture life’s moments it’s not just the picture but the story behind it that’s just as important.

Someone recently asked me when Little Monkey first smiled.  I didn’t know the answer.  I could probably look through photographs and dates to see when smiles started appearing.  But that first one, I don’t know. When did he take his first steps?  I don’t know.  I regret that I don’t have these early memories written down because they’ll never happen again.

Now, I’ve begun this love affair with journaling and writing things down but he was two by the time I started this.  At least a year and a half of memories captured only with images.  And I don’t intend to get all OCD with it but they grow up so fast and memories fade quickly.  And, I feel like until he’s old enough to decide how he wants to document (or not) his own life, it’s my job to do it for him.

What’s This Story?

So in this photo, you can tell we’re happy, he’s happy.  But what else?  If I looked at this photo twenty years from now, would I remember what we were doing or where we were going?  Why he had that big old smile on his face?  I doubt it.

My little man loves trains, a massive understatement.  And we’ve ridden a number of what I would call “miniature trains” at the Cotswold Wildlife Park or Blenheim Palace.  Even vintage trains at the Didcot Railway Centre.  But he’d never been on a real honest to goodness fast modern-day train.  Well, he was when he was an infant on our journey into the US Embassy to get his passport but I don’t count that cause he wouldn’t remember.  But you know what, we live a hop skip and a jump from the train station.  So, inspired by one of my friends, a fellow mum with a boy also obsessed with trains, we rode the train.  We bought tickets and got on the real train, rode it a couple of stops, and then turned around and came back.  And it was magical.  All for the cost of a latte.

My advice to you compulsive photo takers out there (well anyone really)?  Write.  Things.  Down.

  • Carry a small notebook or journal around with you all the time.
  • Paste photos in your journal with little snippets of context.
  • Record the anecdotes that will tell your family’s stories for future generations.

They say a picture is worth 1000 words.  But is it?

Red Delicious
Everyday Adventures

Strawberry Picking Isn’t Nearly As Bad As I Remember It

Yesterday I did something that I know for a fact my mother will be shocked to read about.  I voluntarily took my child strawberry picking.  I enjoyed it.  I thought it was a great afternoon out with my little man.  And I can’t even believe I’m about to type these words, I think we’ll go back and do it again.

You see, I went strawberry picking a lot as a child.  Mom was a jam maker and so we’d venture forth into the strawberry fields and pick for hours, days, years even (OK exaggerating a little there). Because if you’re going to make a proper batch of jam, well you need to pick a certain quota of strawberries.  You can’t just come home with one or two little baskets.  You need to come home with buckets upon buckets of strawberries.  And the strawberry picking I remember was the back-breaking kind, the kind with the strawberries actually planted directly into the ground, the kind that required you to crawl around on your knees searching for the luscious red berries.

But today, I’ve never seen such a wonder.  Row after row of strawberries at eye level where I can just take a leisurely stroll picking, and maybe eating, as I go.  And the little man loved it.  He’s not quite tall enough yet to reach most of the berries, but some were hanging well within the grasp of his little hands.  My most difficult challenge was getting him to pick the ripe ones.

Certainly as he gets older, other much cooler things will have his attention and he will have no interest in going strawberry picking.  Maybe this is what happened to me.  But for now, we’ll just enjoy this as a nice way to spend some time together in the outdoors and learn a little about where food actually comes from.  As I am not a jam maker, just a few berries in a basket to enjoy with cream are enough to satisfy my strawberry cravings.

Maybe we’ll even pick some raspberries next time.

Pick Your Own Menu

Strawberry FieldsPick Me, Pick Me

Sampling the Berries

Strawberry Fields

Luscious Berries

 

ADAY.ORG Collage 3
Everyday Adventures, iPhoneography

A Day in Our Life

Yesterday I took part in the ADAY.org global photo challenge about using “the power of photography to create, share and inspire perspectives on daily life – today and tomorrow.”  People from all over the globe captured moments of their life yesterday and these images will all eventually be part of an online gallery and book with the goal of documenting what life was like around the world on this one day.

I captured everything with my iPhone and Hipstamatic.  Photographer Star Rush inspired me to use black and white as she says, there is an “unrealness” to black and white.  “This is not life.  It’s a photo of it, a recollection.”

In all, I took about 300 photos and had to narrow that down to 10 to submit for the project. The hardest part! To see the 10 photos I contributed, go to my ADAY profile page.

But here’s more of a glimpse into our day yesterday.  We did lots of pretty average, everyday things like the school run, the laundry, running errands in Oxford, having a coffee in Starbucks, and spending time at the playground.  The weather didn’t disappoint by giving us the full spectrum of English weather.  Rain, sun, wind, hail, and thunderstorms.

And I managed to capture proof of all our lives yesterday.

ADAY.ORG Collage 2ADAY.ORG Collage 1

Laundry
Everyday Adventures

Dear Laundry

First, let me start off by saying “Thank you.”  I really appreciate everything you do.  Because of all your efforts, I can confidently go out in public without worrying that I smell and I can safely send my child off to school without Weetabix encrusted on his shirt.

But I’ve got a favor to ask.  Can’t you just quit me?  Just for a little while?  Even if it’s just for a day?  I like to complete things.  I like that feeling of being able to tick something off a list and call it done.  But you?  You’re never complete, never done.  Just when I think I’m done with you, you’re back like Groundhog Day and we start our little dance all over again.  Wash.  Rinse.  Repeat.  Repeat.  Repeat.  Your ability to re-invent yourself every single day, well it’s just uncanny.  Because of you, I’ve got a feeling of constant dread, like I’m being followed.  You’re like a cat hunting its prey, always lurking somewhere ready to pounce.

I realize you hold all the cards here, you know I can’t quit you.  I want to walk around in clean underwear and in clothes that smell like a fresh summer breeze even in the middle of winter.  I want my black shirts to be free of milk stains and snot.  And you know that.  But can’t a girl get a holiday?  Just one day?

Please put some thought into it.  I don’t think it’s too much to ask.

Best regards,

Katherine