It’s cold and rainy today…
…so not much going on. Sitting and knitting most of the day, but I got out earlier and snapped a quick shot of the trees through my wet car window.
I’m cheating today…
These photos weren’t actually taken today, but I processed them today, so I’m going to count that as fair. I took them a couple of weeks ago, using some of my favorite models.
For me, processing means toning the photos to my liking. Fortunately, I work hard to make the lighting perfect before I take the photo, so I don’t have to mess with that part of it. But I want my photos to have a certain feeling to them, so toning them is usually the way that I achieve that.
I love photographing the human form and eliciting a strong emotion to the outcome. One of my models said that I have the ability to make her look both strong and dangerous and soft and feminine at the same time. I take that as a huge compliment, as that is what I am striving to do.
We are all vulnerable and strong, both qualities existing at the same time within us.
These are four of about 500 images.
With the speed of my life these days, I must admit it’s not easy to take a photo a day.
I don’t like to just shoot anything to post here, as that’s not satisfying to me and sort of defeats the purpose. I like to really think about what I am photographing and what it means to me. But on a day like today, that’s not easy.
I worked a 12-hour shift today, with only a small hour break in the middle. So my photos today were taken from my car en route to work after I dropped my son off from school. I knew it would be the only chance I had to photograph.
It really represents my life right now, the huge amount of time I spend in my car and outside of my home. These are buildings I pass along the way every single day. They are a part of my routine now.
Today is my daughter’s 19th birthday.
She is away at college so for the first time ever, I cannot be with her on her birthday, though I did get to see her yesterday.
In celebration of her beautiful spirit and heart, I went on the playground today at work and photographed some of the children. I then went to the church that is next door to our school to photograph a drumming circle there that some of our 4th grade students were participating in.
The church is over 100 years old, small, and lovely. I love photographing old churches. There is a mystery to them that captivates me.
Happy birthday, Emma. I love you dearly. xo
This one is for Christine.
When I was growing up, I was surrounded by boys. I had two older brothers and 6 male 1st cousins (all older except the youngest who was my age). My saving graces were my two 3rd cousins, Francine and Christine. They were both younger than me by a few years, and lived in Charlotte, not far away.
Francine was the older of the two sisters, and had flaming red hair and freckles. She was very quiet, and didn’t speak a lot, so I never quite knew where I stood with her. Christine, however, was very vivacious and beautiful, just beautiful. She had big soulful eyes and exotic dark hair that curled in the most lovely way. She talked a lot and we got along quite well. We took gymnastics together and she was very good. They had a balance beam in their house and a trampoline, too, so I was quite envious.
I loved their house. They lived in a beautiful neighborhood and their home had Japanese accents. There was a creek in the backyard where we would catch salamanders and crayfish. Their mother raised Yorkshire Terriers and their father loved to talk to me about philosophy, religion, and history. I found them to be quite interesting and always enjoyed our visits, especially with Christine.
When the girls were in their teens, the family moved to an 18-acre farm in Weddington. Now instead of a creek, they had a large pond with swans in it, and a beautiful aviary in their home. Instead of Yorkies, their mom now raised pigmy goats. Their father had a library in a balcony where he kept all of his books. I loved the place, though I must admit I did miss their old house. Apparently the girls did, too.
Christine didn’t do so well after they moved. She got in with a cult, was hooked on hard drugs, and then became pregnant some time around the age of 18. She kept the baby and named it after my grandmother, Sarah Catherine, as they were quite close. She would bring her Sarah down for visits, and seemed to be getting her life back together.
But the need for drugs was too strong and some time around 1993 or so, she moved away from her family’s pressure to get her life back together and took her daughter to New York. The last I spoke with her was in 1992 when she sent me a wedding gift. I tried to find her on Facebook last year or anywhere on the web for that matter, and I couldn’t. It’s like she didn’t exist.
On Thanksgiving just past, I learned that Christine threw herself off of the George Washington Bridge on Mother’s Day, 2014.
It took them 3 months to identify her body. She had no identification on her, and no one reported her missing. For no one to report her missing means that nobody missed her. She had long been out of communication with her parents (they hadn’t spoken in 3 years) and her daughter–now in her 20s and engaged–would have nothing to do with her. She had no one.
It saddens me deeply. I really liked Christine. We grew up together. She was my favorite cousin.
To think that her life–which once appeared so happy and together–had gone off the rails so much is frightening. I wonder what it was like for her, what pushed her to commit suicide on Mother’s Day. Her mother said that she had always thought that she was bi-polar. Maybe the drugs helped her to make sense of her life. Maybe knowing that she was alone was too much for her.
It is important to note, very important, that they found no drugs in her system at the time of her death. So it was all her free will with no added confusion.
There was no funeral, no obituary, no memorial. She just died and that was it.
So this picture is for her. It’s of my front window, lit by the warm glow of the lamp by my favorite chair. You can see the blue sky in the reflection, and birthday flowers from a friend in the window. It represents the peace that I wish she could have found for herself. And it’s my way of saying I will remember her.
My home is nowhere near perfect. In fact, I struggle with it.
I’m gone a lot with work and getting the kids where they need to be, so my home gets pushed to the back of the list on most days. Still, it is where I come to feel connected and centered. Though it’s not nearly what I want it to be, it’s getting there. So today’s photos reflect some of the comforts of home.
Back home today, after picking up Emma, Nick, and Olivia from Monroe.
These shots are of my mom’s cat “Fred.” Fred is a stray who decided to start living at my mother’s house. She loves him, and he brings something positive to her otherwise stressful life.
Happy Thanksgiving! I’m so glad to spend the day with my family. Everyone. What a blessing that is.
Here are some shots from the day. The first is a photo of my home behind the gate that goes to my grandparent’s home. Rather ominous and telling of the state of things. The rest are photos from the Beasley House, the house that my aunts own.