Looking at it Through a Lens

A few years ago, within days of one another, Ginny and Ann both gave me some advice. They encouraged me to buy a good camera and lens, to take it in my hands, to learn to use it, and so, to open a new window on my world.  I took their words to heart, but it has taken me some time to put them into action.

Last winter, with Ginny’s guidance, I bought a new lens. And then, a new camera. I played with them a little, but nothing really clicked (no pun intended). I certainly didn’t fall in love with camera, lens, or photography.  Ann’s words, in particular, rang in my head, but they still sounded hollow. She wanted me to see differently through a lens, to grab what I was seeing and truly appreciate it. To be grateful for the image and for what it represented. That whole experience evaded me.

Then, my father-in-love died. I spent most of the first week sorting through images. I was looking for pictures of him to gather into collages for the visitation. Over the course of several days, I ended up walking though both his life and mine. There were pictures of him as a young father (Mike’s oldest brother is 66). There were pictures of my husband’s childhood. And then, there were glorious pictures of my babies, of me, of our young family.

 Most of those pictures were taken by Christian’s godfather, who is a gifted photographer and spent countless hours with us in his bachelor days. I am so very grateful for the gift of the images. Somewhere along the way, in those very painful days after the funeral, I picked up my camera. And I looked at it differently. I looked through it differently.

The first time my camera and I walked together in this new way, Stephen was playing the State Cup finals. It was a beautiful day. A happy day. A painfully raw day. Everyone was there. But someone was missing. The blue chairs were there. I couldn’t bear to sit in one of them. Actually, I couldn’t bear to sit at all. It was too reminiscent of the spring, when we were all there in the same place for Nick’s final. Only then, we were all there.

I borrowed Michael’s big lens and took myself down to the end of the field, away from the crowd. I lifted the camera to my face and I looked. I looked at the sidelines, where Paddy and Mike sat in the chairs. I looked at my father, who was all too aware that Mike’s dad wasn’t there. I looked away from the shadow across his face. Mortality. There it was.

I began to understand that afternoon why a musician feels the way he does about his guitar, why a baseball player becomes attached to his bat. I captured images that day and my camera captured my heart. Suddenly everything was about the light. I began to notice light. Really notice.  I learned that I could tell a story with pictures and that sometimes, when words failed, the pictures were just as good. Perhaps one day, the pictures will be even better. I’d be quite pleased if words and pictures together could tell my story, could speak to how grateful I am for these full days.

A few days later, we traveled to Charlottesville to watch Patrick play. I brought along Granddad’s jacket that night, expecting a chill when night fell. It’s my jacket now and I plan to wear it well. I couldn’t that night, though. Mike was in short sleeves and needed it more and well, the jacket, the chair—I just can’t right now. Instead, I tucked my sweater around myself, put the camera strap around my neck, and took Ginny’s advice to heart: Focus with your feet. Move to the shot.

Move I did. Don’t tell Stephen, but photographing Patrick is far more challenging. Everyone was moving so much faster. I have seen a million soccer games, give or take a few. I’ve never noticed one the way I noticed this one. I love the buzz and click sound the lens makes. I love it when I get lucky (because right now it’s all pure luck) and the shot is a good one.

I love these days. And I’m grateful. 

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needle & thREAD

needle and thREAD

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I welcome you to needle and thREAD. What have you been sewing lately? Or are you embroidering? Pulling a needle with thread through lovely fabric to make life more beautiful somehow? Would you share with us just a single photo and a brief description of what you're up to? Would you talk sewing and books with us? I'd love that so much. Tell me about it in the contents or leave a link to your blog. I'll be happy to come by and visit!

You can get your own needle & thREAD button here in your choice of several happy colors.

Katie’s Book Report Dress is nearly finished. All it needs is cuffs and a hem. So cute: color blocks, sweet pockets, darling pleats. She thinks it's adorable. I so loved sewing this dress. It’s been pure magic to just be in my sewing room and have this creation come together. More and more, I am convinced that there is something about that room and fabric and just, well, all of it, that is essential to my soul at this point in life.  So, yes, magical dress.

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Except it doesn’t fit.

It’s entirely too narrow across the shoulders. I’ll finish it, I’m certain. Then, I suppose it will sit in the closet three years or so before Karoline can wear it. Katie is bummed because it seems to her like Karoline ends up with quite a few pretty wonderful things that don’t fit her. I still have fabric for an adult Lisette Market Dress pattern that might just fit.

 

My fiction was delivered to Christian’s apartment instead of to my house (I’m sure he was bemused). So, the whole plan to immerse myself in light fiction was most definitely thwarted. Instead, I’ve been reading back issues of Welcome Home magazine. Welcome Home has long been out of print. Once upon a time, I edited the magazine. Then, I realized that somehow this wonderful opportunity to work from home, in the margins of my life, was sucking the life out of my days. The irony was not lost on us. 

I’ve been pondering a lot lately how the decision to be a mother at home and to make mothering and home the primary focus of my days is a decision I have to make over and over again. More on that later, I think.

So tell us all about your reading and stitching!

November Silence

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With November comes the flurry, then the blizzard, of “holiday” exhortations: Go more, buy more, do more. At first, there are little wisps of messages, soft, light, so gentle I barely notice. Then, the storm whips into a frenzy. Soon, it’s swirling around me, making me dizzy, robbing my peace. It’s not, of course, only the end-of-year holidays that spin crazy into my life; it’s just that the holidays spin more.

It’s early November. I have a strategy and my strategy is for silence. I’m laying down the rails right now, steady sturdy tracks upon which this new habit will roll. It will be in place before the first crazy flake falls. This year, I refuse to be caught in the swirl. He will come to me in the silence. I will be certain to establish and to guard that silence vigilantly.

Our lives have become increasingly noisy. Have you noticed that? Smartphones go with us wherever we go. We’ve given permission to employers and clients and even perfect strangers to jump right up through our pockets and jangle us into their worlds. They intrude, interrupt, make noise. And we let them.

We take our music wherever we go, earbuds providing a soundtrack to our lives. With the flip of a switch, we can find ourselves in a conversation with dozens of people at once. We can share pictures, menus, and every random thought and opinion. Remember when there were only three channels on the television? Sometimes, there was nothing good on TV. So off you went to do something else, often something quiet. Now, endless channels, always something to watch. It’s noise, noise, noise. And I feel my inner Grinch rising.

God comes to us in the silence, but we increasingly are becoming a people who are afraid to be still and quiet. We can’t even be alone with our own thoughts. Next time you have to wait in a grocery line or even a line of traffic at a red light, notice how many people automatically whip out their phones. True, they aren’t making noise, but they aren’t alone with their thoughts, either. They are engaging the noise of the world. There is noise in their heads.

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A friend reminded me of a time when we felt a little guilty reading a book while nursing a baby. We thought maybe that was distracted nursing. Now, moms in rocking chairs are scrolling Facebook and Instagram, illuminating the dark nights with the glare of a backlit screen. I know this, because they’re posting pictures of it. And sure, endless hours in a rocking chair can come to feel monotonous and lonely. But a few hours in a rocking chair can be a very good thing. Those are your moments to pray, Mama. Your moments to dream, to think big thoughts, or just to close your eyes and doze. I promise you will grow in those moments because God Himself will come to you in the dark and the silence and the stillness of your soul.

Silence isn’t only for nursing mothers. When was the last time you commuted without the radio on? Can you sit in the dark parking lot for the last 15 minutes of soccer practice and just watch them play without checking your phone? And really, there is nothing so sweet as the end-of-the-day silence when a restless little boy needs someone to snuggle him to sleep. Go seek your silent moments.

We look forward to the joyful season of waiting and preparing for the birth of our Savior. We invite the outdoor chill and light a fire on our hearths. We welcome the coming of the season. How shall we welcome the coming? How can we prepare our hearts for Him?

Perhaps we clear some space. We push away some of those noisy things that compete for our attention and we hush the incessant barrage of messages from out there. Together, we endeavor to bring quiet to our homes and so, to our hearts. He comes to us in the silence. Can you hear Him?

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