COVID-19: Week 7-ish

Spring’s slow roll, a New England phenomenon decidedly different from my Texas experience, continues to amaze me on the daily. The wearisome rain, persistently present throughout the pandemic so far, threatens joy in the way of the wizarding world’s dementors; like Harry Potter we find ourselves looking for chocolate frogs (in covid terms: sunny days) to relieve us. The rain, though, coaxes seedlings to sprout, to bloom, to flower. Our garage houses baby birds; our neighborhood continues to explode in color. Outdoors continues to be my best coping mechanism for these strange days.

Indoors, Facetime and phone calls and food prep and working at home build a routine. A friend texted me midweek last week (impossibly week SEVEN of this) “weekends feel like weekends again.” Indeed, they do. I suppose that speaks to adjusting to whatever this is, to letting whatever this is be what it is. Days hold enough space for tears and frustration and fears right alongside of laughter, hope, calm. Even as the world feels chaotic and broken, I’m learning that acceptance means recognizing that my life remains safe and relatively peaceful. I feel fortunate; I am privileged. I can be grateful for what I have even while I grieve that many have wholly different experiences.

No answers to the questions of how bad and how long and how many and who continue create tension. So much suffering. So much death. And still, there is evening; there is morning. New days dawn; their persistence reminds me to breathe out fear and breathe in hope. Last week that looked like deciding to go for walks to see the flowers. To watch the wind chimes my sister mailed me blow in the breeze, knowing in her backyard they’re twinned and chiming too. To sit across a blanket from friends and make the baby laugh. To watch my husband fall asleep on the couch, nightly, surrounded by at least two thirds of our menagerie. To bake and run and sleep and write and photograph. Some day we will have answers to the hard questions of this. We don’t yet. What we do have is the choice to acknowledge the uncertainty and decide to show up for our lives as best we can. I think anyways.

Hope you’re doing okay, friends. We’re all in this together, even as we are, for a time apart.

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Welcoming Pearl

Connection creates the most compelling story a photograph might tell, every time. When a collection of photographs communicates the unique and yet universal beauty of a family, together, in the comfortable security of just being, I find my most prevalent response to their photos one of gratitude. They've allowed me to see and document something true and good about life, about the world.

Pearl's newborn session, just three days after her birth, stands out to me because the joy and energy in her family as they adjusted their lives to welcome this tiny person felt tangible from beginning to end. I saw so much love, from her confident, proud biggest sister and her finding-her-way little not-quite-as-big sister to her smiles-never-left-their-faces mom and dad. It felt like they'd all been waiting for her all their lives and like in 72 short hours her permanence in their hearts and home was long established. I saw so much connection that day.

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Welcoming Oliver

Real talk: it's been four months since I blogged, and little Oliver is almost a year old, and well, I've been intending to share these photos since he arrived. This was just before I relocated to Connecticut, and I loved seeing how proud big brother Meyer was to show me his baby. I loved seeing Mom and Dad pass their boys back and forth and handle the transition from one to two like pros. I loved the warmth in their home and the ease in the day. I knew when I photographed Oliver's newborn photos that I'd likely slow down on working with newborns for a while. It's been a quiet year for me in that department.

I'm excited, though, to be moving towards 2018 and being settled into a Connecticut routine. I'm starting to photograph family sessions more regularly here, and I'm looking forward to launching into newborns in the new year. I photographed my first Connecticut little miss a couple of weeks ago and will share those soon. I love capturing documentary, lifestyle photographs at the hospital or in families' homes as they welcome new family member. I love the ways hearts expand to embrace a tiny new baby just so. It's truly one of most incredible things I get to witness. I'll be getting back to blogging on the regular in the coming weeks, and Oliver's session seemed fitting beginning.

Connecticut friends, if you or someone you know is welcoming a baby in the new year, I'd love to hear from you. In the meantime, enjoy Oliver's session.

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