Hunger for the Ordinary

When I went to my sister Debo’s after her second baby arrived in January, her house held the quiet chaos of a newborn’s needs and a toddler adjusting to his lost only child status. We made copious amounts of coffee, and I took copious amounts of photos while we tried to help Freddy adjust and keep Finnley warm and fed. My parents and siblings came and went. We marveled at the baby and allowed the wonder of him to capture our hearts. I drew pictures and sang songs with Freddy. He felt some big feelings sometimes, and mostly he accepted his brother, even as we could tell he was trying to figure things out. His new world included a whole entire other person, his very own baby.

On Sunday morning, as soon as Freddy finished his milk, Tyler took him to the donut shop, a tradition. I tagged a long. A pajama-clad Fred chirped toddler excitement on the quick drive, clinging to a stuffy. On arrival, Tyler lifted his little big boy out of the carseat, and the pair headed inside. Freddy took his time picking out donuts. Tyler and I sampled a cronut, then another, the lady behind the counter offering us the sample plate again and again. A few minutes later, we’d procured a box of donuts, a bag of pigs-in-blankets and some chocolate milk. We headed home to feast.

After I got back to Connecticut, I had many photos I loved of that trip and Finn’s newborn magic. These few photos from that morning, though, stood out to me as a different kind of wonderful. I kept coming back to them. Here- a morning, a toddler, his dad, some donuts- simple and compelling, I think, because of just how ordinary everything was. Back then I had no idea that come August gone would be the norm of letting a two-year-old press his face against the glass to pick out a donut. If donuts are on deck these days, a masked Tyler leaves Freddy at home with my sister.

These many months into the pandemic I still keep coming back to these photos. I hunger for the ordinary, for days when we didn’t know to appreciate the simple and compelling goodness of small errands with little big boys, gripping their sticky little hand after they too sampled a cronut. I miss those kinds of errands. The world is experiencing a collective grief, the disorienting loss of our ordinary days. We aren’t lacking in beauty and wonder in this utterly different experience, but it’s important to acknowledge the pain point if we are to do more than just survive (though if surviving is all you can do, that’s ok). I don’t quite know what to make of the seeming unending-ness of the virus’ impact. I hope, though, that someday soon ordinary will return to donut traditions. I can get a donut any day, but I miss the witnessing the connections, the community.

When we got home, Freddy and his family sat around their kitchen table, and I joined them. The coffee was hot and abundant, and our breakfast, still warm, overly sweet, pastry perfection. We ate. We talked. We passed the baby around. Freddy peek-a-booed me through the hole in his donut. I knew the rightness of our little corner of the world then, and I had no idea of the magnitude of the gift we lived that morning. I look forward to the return of ordinary days, different though they might be. In the meantime, some photographs. They still pull me right in.

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COVID-19: Week 10-ish

Every week since we started staying home I’ve posted a collection of photos of the preceding week. It’s helped me pay attention, reminded me that the days going by hold choices about how to live in the midst of uncertainty in these altogether strange times. Sharing I hope helps you parse out the happenings in your own life as we walk this out. Today, with the passing of 100,000 deaths in this country alongside of another Black man slaughtered in the street by a white cop, it all feels like too much. I don’t have a lot in the way of words.

The photographs from last week (I pull Monday to Sunday of the prior week in this series) today remind me that even in the face of hatred, death and denial, new days keep dawning, and maybe for this post, that’s enough. New days mean hope exists in the midst of the mess, and I want to inhale the relief that comes with that reality and exhale the overwhelming grief.

We’re all in this together, even as we are, for a time, apart.

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COVID-19: Week 8-ish

A struggle: I want to believe we are all in this together, that in coming alongside one another, even from a distance, we will beat the virus. I fear, instead, that the refusal to believe scientific evidence coupled with putting individual perceived “rights” (to not wear a mask, to pretend business as usual will not be harmful, to ignore CDC and WHO recommendations or to dismiss them because “I’m not high risk,” etc) will further divide an already polarized nation. And for what? A few more dollars in our pockets at the cost of many more lives lost? Remember in the beginning when this country was told we wouldn’t have a problem, then that there would be very few deaths, then that a hundred thousand would be pretty good? I lose sleep over this, not because I’m pessimistic- I’m not- and not because I’m liberal- though I am. I have eyes and ears as well as the recognition that I don’t know enough to make best practices recommendations. People devote their whole lives to studying this stuff, and they, along with those on the frontlines who must go to work and risk illness themselves, need to be considered when making choices.

This struggle is the exhaustion-inducing grief of living in this moment, and I know that acknowledging it allows breathing room for all of the other pieces of living in this moment, many of which counterbalance the weight of the virus.

Staying home, because we have enough to live in a comfortable house with access to what we need, has slowed the pace of life for weeks now. Instead of feeling frantic during the workweek, which had become commonplace for me, I complete my daily tasks without eyes constantly on an impossibly long to-do list. At work my role is reduced, which remains unsettling. My requests, though, are limited to prevent virus spread and to keep my workload reasonable for the time I have. My side-hustle has gone silent for the time being, and while I miss taking photos of families, I believe those opportunities will return down the road. With boundaries around work, I find myself grateful for time to run when the weather is best. Ty and I continue to go on a lot of walks, and noticing the changing trees and flowers almost daily mesmerizes me. Books get read and words get written on a whim, and that feels like I gift I haven’t had access to since high school. This week we had another dusting of snow and historic cold right alongside of warm, sunny evenings. The tulip garden at Elizabeth Park was in full bloom. Neither of us sleeps particularly well, but we have grown in our ability to rest, even with so much uncertainty. I feel like I report the same happenings weekly now, and while some of it is quite monotonous, the wonder of finding beauty in hidden corners of our home and neighborhood provokes curiosity and creativity, the very stuff of hope.

The unexpected halt to life as we knew it remains. I don’t have answers about what normal will look like when we get “back” to it. I do believe hope that even as we hear stories of the worst of humanity, many, many stories of goodness are being quietly lived out in masks on faces, in groceries purchased for elderly neighbors, in teachers reading stories, in smiles and waves and choosing to stay home, in signs in windows, in buying from small businesses whenever possible (we ordered takeout this week from our favorite Indian place- the first time we’d had restaurant food since March!). So we keep moving forward, hopefully with some wisdom and grace, packaged with a side of kindness. Hope you’re hanging in. The landscape of this perpetual Groundhog Day is shifting in some places; be and stay safe.

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COVID-19: Week 2-ish

My sister sent a video of my two-year-old nephew this morning . “He all done quarantine,” he said, pointing to a stuffed elephant at his side. Aren’t we all? And yet the second week passed, a Groundhog Day playing out against the hum of Zoom meetings and video calls. We found ourselves with shrunken paychecks and non-existent social lives. Even on the nights I managed to sleep solidly for seven or eight hours, I woke up exhausted.

Still, the week started with an early spring flash of snow, and we stood wide-eyed in the backyard, delighted for a morning decorated white, even as new blooms peeked through. Daily a little more spring emerged, nature reminding us life perpetuates, even in this weirdly shaken state. Watching winter yield to season’s change, as it does, always, gives me hope that this great pause is our own yielding to life, to health.

That doesn’t mean I don’t fear for my livelihood, for the livelihoods of others. In a matter of days my employment reduced substantially. I would fear more, though, if this necessary slowdown wasn’t happening, because the trajectory of the virus indicates we had to stop. Just stop. Everyone, except for those whose lives sustain ours, to whom we are all indebted. So partial furlough it is. Both Ty and I are now working fewer hours, which means we’re doing puzzles and reading. A lot. We get outside every day. I try to stick to limits with the ever-present newsfeed. I’m still running miles. I take out my camera often. That practice became a daily tool when I was recovering from cancer treatment, and I’m finding that rhythm similarly soothing now. It makes me pay attention. In paying attention I find that each day holds room for gratitude and grief, for delight and depression, for anxiety and awe. Our menagerie, sensitive to whatever this change is, bring comfort and levity to this abnormal mundane moment. The vague unknowns are. Acceptance is all that can be done with the ever-curling question marks.

So, I’m doing my best to be present to each day as it comes, because like it or not, we’re not all done with quarantining yet (sorry Freddy and sorry your toddler self is well enough acquainted with that word to use it appropriately). My photos, like Freddy’s elephant, help me process, so I’m sharing them. Maybe they’ll help you too. How are you doing, friends? We’re all in this together, even as we are, for a time, apart.

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As Mother's Day Approaches

Last week I attended a workshop on storytelling, and the speaker said that it's often small nuances that happen in the midst of our big life-changing stories that pack the most punch. He said looking there helps us find the stories within a story that illustrate human connection on the deepest level, drawing listeners in. That resonated.

With Mother's Day approaching these photographs of my sister and my nephew on the eve of my niece's birth kept coming to mind. Meghan's attentiveness towards and concern for Jameson as she prepared for the arrival of her daughter clarified so much of what makes her an incredible mom to both her kids. She knew he was on the precipice of change and wanted his transition to be smooth. She wanted him to know he was loved, he was ready and his place was secure. And the conflicting emotions of anticipating a beautiful change in her little family alongside of letting go of the sweetness of a season ending so a new one could begin- they showed up. Is that not the never-ending stuff of motherhood?

Maggie's birth and newborn photos are a blog not yet written, but for the lead up to Mother's Day I wanted to share these few simple photos, because they move me, and I hope they do the same for you.

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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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