What "I Wanna Help" Looks Like | Lifestyle Challenge March 2012

These days, it seems I can't do much without a little Someone asking to help me. Lila has a favorite kitchen stool that she carries from station to station, so she can reach the countertops.  Watch your toes.

She asks to feed Charlotte all the time, and she can put the spoon in her mouth, but I'm always afraid she'll jab it in there a little too "helpfully", so I offered a compromise.  Lila's doll shares the table with us, and eats when Charlotte does.

She can unsnap a diaper faster than I can.  She always knows where the wipes are (likely because she carried them off in the first place).  She picks out her own clothes 90% of the time, and I let her.  She often brings me snacks or juice boxes (one for her, and one for me).  And she's always forgiven when she sneaks a cookie for herself but brings me one too.

She asks me on a daily basis, "Can we bake?"  She's darn good at cracking eggs and she loves to add flour to the mixing bowl.  And always the chocolate chips.  Always.  She sneaks a few of those throughout the process too.

This particular day, we were baking Peppermint Crinkle Cookies.  Yes, it was around the holidays.  And yes, I know it's March now.  I've meant to share these with you every month since.  So today, I hope you'll enjoy this little morning of baking with my big girl.  My helper.

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What "I Wanna Help," Looks Like

I had already made the dough the night before, and we were rolling the cookies into balls and dipping them in confectioner's sugar. Never a girl to stay clean for long, she had sugar all over her face about thirty seconds into it.

I love the softness of this one.

The hardest part is waiting for them to bake.  Such long minutes for a little girl.

And of course, the finished product.  They were delicious!

I always remember Mom letting us help her cook, even when we were very little, and very messy.  She would let us crack eggs and quietly pick out the shells without saying a word to us about them.  I remember dumping flour and sugar into the bowl, holding the electric mixer, scraping the last bits of batter from the bowl into the pan.  I know that by letting us "help", it made her time in the kitchen that much longer, and her cleaning the kitchen back up took that much longer as well.  But she always let us help anyway.

I hope that when Lila grows up and "be's a mommy" as she calls it, that she will remember these days with me and let her little ones help her too.

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Please continue on our blog carousel to the extremely talented Wendy Vonsosen  | San Francisco Bay Area Photographer.  Wendy's lifestyle work is so insightful, and I can't wait to see what wonder she's captured for us this month.

Elevate: A Fine Art Photography Exploration | March 2012

I think it's high time I get myself posting regularly on this blog again, what do you say?  Photography is healing for me, after all.  And so is writing.  Maybe this is part of what I've been missing lately? After what we've been through for the past six months, I feel like I need to celebrate this sweet little one a little more.  My darling Charlotte.  Perfectly happy 99.5% of the time, and the other .5% she only gently fusses to let us know she needs something (usually milk or a nap).  She could never know how much her birth has meant to me.  Even through my ppd, she has remained so happy and pleasant.  Charlotte has been our angel.  She has the sweetest smile each morning.  She pushes up on her hands and gives me a wrinkled-nose grin that melts my heart.  Each night when I nurse her to sleep, she quietly holds on to me and drifts off; content, peaceful, full.

In comparison to my other two children, Charlotte and I have a lot of catching up to do in the quantity-of-photographs department.  But hopefully this is a good start toward making up the difference...

Sweet girl.  You can't possibly know how much you're loved.  But I promise to try and show you, now and every day until forever.

I'm honored to be a part of Elevate: A Fine Art Exploration with some extremely talented photographers.  Each month, these women and I have vowed to push ourselves and simply shoot for us.  I've had to skip a couple of months recently, but this month, I am ever so grateful for this project and for the healing comfort it's given my heart.  I encourage you to follow our circle, read on and discover what beauty the extremely talented Renee Popat is sharing with the world today.  Thank you so much for being here.  I so appreciate you, friends.  xo

xo

Breaking the Silence

This week on The Creative Mama, my fellow bloggers and friends are sharing our stories of postpartum depression, some for the first time ever.  So many people have commented on my initial post here, and I've received countless emails from other moms who feel so similar.  As horrible as this feels to go through, it feels amazing to know that we're helping other mamas by sharing our experiences.  You aren't alone.  We encourage you to come by every day this week.  Say hi, and leave a few words of hope for our readers if you feel led. xoxo,

Stacey

A Featured Article, a Webinar, a Chubby Baby, and Catching You Up

I am one busy girl this week.  Wanna take a peek at what's on my plate? We are on our last week of portfolio reviews over on the Chic Critique Forum.  Trying to get caught up on those!  They're a lot of fun, and I love being able to help other photographers take a fresh look at their work!

Today I'm sharing a bit of my black and white processing tips over on The Creative Mama.  If you would like a little bit of a peek at my before and after, processing a backlit near-silhouette photo from color to black and white, then check it out.  And yes, I do show you blown highlights and all.  On purpose, but still... it's pretty intimidating.  If you choose to comment, please be kind.  ;)

Last night, we had the dress rehearsal for Chic Critique's Celebrity Secrets Revealed Live Webinar, and it promises to be pretty amazing.  I'm honored to be considered for the lineup of photographers presenting!  On Monday, May 5, I'll be talking about shooting in low light, and giving you pointers and tips for doing it in your own clients'  homes.  You can sign up HERE and be a part of it!

I'm working on some improvements and additions to my Bloom Forum Mini-Workshop, Lifestyle: Your Style.  I hope to have that ready to roll out soon.  And I'm working on some updates and facelifts for the blog as well.  In all my spare time. ;)

And I'm shipping out a small truckload of client orders and prints this week.  I'm so behind!  A huge thank you to my ever-patient clients who have been so kind and gracious recently.  I can never thank you enough for all of your support and understanding.  You're so wonderful, and I'm lucky to know you.

I realized that I haven't shared a photo of Charlotte lately.  She turned six months last week!  Would you like to see how chunky she's gotten?

Loves nibbling her feet, having conversations with the ceiling fan, and laughs and smiles constantly.  And most recently, she loves avocados.  That's my girl.  Thankfully, our littlest love is sleeping through the night fairly regularly now.  She slept 10 hours last night and I think she barely moved the entire night.  She usually flip-flops around and ends up on her tummy by morning.  If we could only get the rest of the occupants in our house to stay in their beds, we would be all set!  Sadly, it seems that Lila cannot sleep separately from Parker.  When he sleeps in his own bed, she tiptoes into our room before dawn, without fail.  When he does sleep in her room, she has a bad dream or hears a noise and ends up in our bed anyway.  Which in turn wakes up the puppy, who is asleep in his crate in our living room.  And so the howling begins.  Our poor neighbors.  I can't tell you the last time either Chris or I got a solid eight hours of uninterrupted sleep.  No wonder I need anti-depressants, right?  ;)

Alright, so you're all caught up!  I have to go catch up now, myself.  I have a lot of matting, wrapping, shipping and writing to do before Parker gets home from school.  I've made him my official after-school running partner!

This Beautiful Life

I can't begin to express to you how much your support on my "PPD coming out party" post have meant to me.  It's unbelievably encouraging to know I'm not alone, and now you know that you aren't either.  I've received an inbox full of personal emails as well, from women who wanted to share their experience, offer their advice, or just leave me a few especially kind words.  THANK YOU, truly, each and every one of you.  Your response has brought tears to my eyes, and hope to my heart. I found this quote on Pinterest a while back.  I wish I knew who the author was so I could credit him or her.  But I printed it up in Photoshop to display here at home.  I just like the reminder.  I wanted to share it here today, because I thought it might hit home with all of you who have emailed me recently and left comments on my post about ppd.  It's not meant to make you (or me) feel guilty for feeling the way we do!  It's just meant to sort of sum up where we are (or at least where I am right now).

And, well, this is pretty much where I am.  Not forever, mind you, but for now.  And that's okay.  Every tomorrow will be a little easier, right?

Also make sure you check out Emily's beautiful post on how hard it is to raise four kids.  I read it this morning, nodded my head in agreement with every word, and then wept again (a common occurrence these days).

My sister sent me this book a while back, and I'm enjoying reading through it a little bit at a time.  Some of you might find it helpful when the dog is howling and the baby is crying and the other two kids are fighting you just want to pull your hair out for whatever reason.  The great thing about it is that it's divided into very short chapters, because the author knew that we'd only have short bursts of time to read it anyway, before one of the kids floods the bathroom trying to "wash the floor".  (True story from my week.)

Care to share your favorite quotes that have helped you get through your most challenging times?  I'd sure love to read them, and someone else may, too!

My Confession. And Why I'm Running Away.

When was the last time you had a good, long cry in the shower?  Me, I had one this morning.  Sometimes it's just what we need, isn't it? You see, I have a confession to make.  (Deep breath here.)  I have struggled with debilitating postpartum-depression since Charlotte was born.  I've done my absolute best to keep it a secret from everyone (including clients, sigh), except a few close family members and a couple of friends, but that's proving to be more difficult than I thought.  I'm not one to make my blog a sob story and I don't want any "poor you"s.  I'm an optimist.  I don't like to push negativity out into the world.  I'm all for keeping it real, of course, but I still have to keep my negativity in check.  I want this to be a positive, inspiring place.  I know you don't care to read all my dirty laundry, but you must know that I have a basket of it here and there.

In any case, PPD is a very frustrating experience.  If you've never suffered from it, it can be very hard to understand from the outside.  And if I'm being honest, it's very hard to understand from the inside too.  It affects everything in your life.  Home.  Work.  Family.  Your self-esteem.  It's hormonal, emotional, psychological, and physical.  Post-partum depression makes you feel so ashamed of yourself for feeling the way you do.

Here's the thing.  I'm likely THE most grateful person you'd ever want to meet.  I've been blessed beyond measure.  My three kids are healthy, incredibly smart, strong and gorgeous (yes I said it, they are mine and I can brag if I want to).  Parker is so funny, and the brightest boy I've ever seen.  He makes us all so very proud.  Lila is the most thoughtful and helpful child ever.  I don't know how I'd make it through a day without her.  Charlotte is truly the sweetest baby ever born.  She smiles all the time and she is an absolute joy day in and day out.  I get to wake up every morning next to the man I love more than life itself, and whom I still think is pretty hot, even after almost 14 years together. We live in a cozy house in Florida and can visit the Gulf Beaches within 20 minutes, anytime we darn well please.  I am fortunate to be able to do what I love for a living, and to do it from home.  I am able to be with my kids more than most working moms I know.  I have a Savior who loves me and forgives me on days when I'm not as grateful as I should be.  I have a circle of sweet, caring friends, who would do anything to help me if I just told them what was happening.

Yep.  I have a rough life, don't I?

See, this is what makes it so frustrating.  And isolating.  And seemingly unfair.  I do love my life!  I just want to... run away from it, most days.  Does that make any sense at all?   Call me ungrateful, but I don't think I am.  Hormonal is more like it.

I'd been through PPD once before, after Parker was born.  But then after Lila, I was perfectly fine.  So I thought I'd be safe the third time around.

But I was so wrong.  Despite a beautiful natural birth experience with Charlotte, I struggled with managing three kids once I got home.  What is it about that third child?  I had it all planned out, all organized and ready.  But she was born two weeks early.  And nothing worked out the way I'd planned.  She was born on the first day of second grade for Parker.  And since we all were still at the birth center, he had to skip his first day.  My husband wasn't able to get off work that week because another employee was out on medical leave.  So the only day he was home with me was the very day Charlotte was born.  Just thirty-six hours after giving birth, I was loading our baby and our three-year-old into the SUV and driving to the bus stop to get Parker, myself.  Chris worked late three nights that week.  I developed mastitis.  Charlotte wouldn't latch on properly.  I missed Open House at Parker's school, and didn't even meet his teacher for at least two months.  I yelled at the kids more than I care to admit.  I cried constantly.  The house was a mess.  I couldn't find anything, and neither could the kids.  I all but disappeared from The Creative Mama (thank God for Bree).  All of our family lives out of state and I made it painfully clear that I wanted the first few weeks alone with "just us".  I desperately needed a break from the revolving door our house had been that entire year, but  in doing so, I shut out all offers for help.  I went back to work teaching workshops just six weeks after the baby was born, and that was entirely too early.  I never really got that "break" that maternity leave is supposed to provide.  But when you're self-employed, there is no short-term disability.  Maternity leave = no pay.  But since Charlotte arrived early, and I had worked up until the very last minute, I still had orders to place and prints to deliver during my entire maternity leave.  Bitterness and resentment set in, along with exhaustion and complete mommy-brain.  Even the max dose of Zoloft (which is, as I understand, the only type of antidepressant you can take while nursing a baby) wasn't quite enough.  I just shut down.  Some days I just want to sleep, eat, nurse my baby, and cry myself back to sleep.  Rinse.  Repeat.

I am likely the unhappiest, most grateful person alive.  Now how about that?  At least I finally get to say I live a "balanced" life, right?  (Sorry, that was a terrible joke.)

And then I read Tara's freeing post about feeling like she's just existing and not living.  I read Hayley's blissfully honest post revealing that she doesn't do it all (and that no one really does anyway).  Yesterday, I soaked up Alison's encouraging post about why she runs, and the good it does for her.  (I love to run too, and I miss it so much.)  So then I have another good cry in the shower.  Only this time, my husband walks in.  He's usually not home to see my crying episodes.  I know I look a mess.  Wrapped in a towel with mascara streaming down my face, my eyes red and swollen, and wet hair dripping onto the bathroom floor (well, what few strands that haven't fallen out since I gave birth to Charlotte).  He asks me to sit down and tell him what I'm feeling today.

And I do.  I just break down.  Tearfully, I tell him how much I just want to disappear and melt into the floor.  How I'd run away in a heartbeat if I knew that it wouldn't affect him and our kids.  And instead of hugging me, instead of telling me it's going to be okay... he tells me to get my rear end out the door.

"Well, then RUN.  Put on your shoes.  Just go run away for thirty minutes, or an hour.  Run your stress out.  Then come back."

Did I mention how much I love that man??

See, I'm crying again.  I told you PPD was frustrating.

But I will get through this.  Today, I really ran.  I tied up my Asics and put the pup on his leash, and we took off down the street.  I want to kiss my husband when he gets home and tell him how much "running away" actually made me feel so much better.  I didn't get the runner's high today (I'm still painfully out of shape), but I did breathe some fresh air and I am on my way to finding my center again.  Finally.  I have hope.  Just in time.

Tomorrow I will put on my running shoes again.  And I'll keep running away until I don't have to run away anymore.  I'll eventually run for the sheer love of it again.

 

Have you struggled with postpartum depression??  I know I'm not alone, and I plan to share more openly about this in the future, both here on my blog and over at The Creative Mama.  Please feel free to share your experience in the comments, or email me privately, if you are suffering silently like I am was, and want to get this off your chest.  And as Hayley and my midwife so eloquently put it, "give yourself some grace."  I'm learning to give myself a little bit too.  It's hard, but just like running, I guess we need to take one step at a time, right?

Chic Critique | Celebrity Secrets Revealed Live Web Event

Today is the LAST DAY to sign up for my 4-week Chic Critique, which runs from now until March 2.  If you'd like a portfolio review, or just a few tips on post-processing, lighting, getting more emotion into your images, or anything else that's "bothering" you about your work... then I'd encourage you to sign up right now!  You'll be able to submit your images to me each week for my detailed video critique on each one, and find out specific actions that you can take to improve your photography.  Improve your confidence, and your images!  How I wish I'd had something like this available to me when I began my photography journey!! While you're there, be sure to sign up for the exclusive Celebrity Secrets REVEALED Live Web Event!  It's only available to Chic Critique Forum Members, and the Intro Price this week is just $89! 

Read on to find out more... I hope to see you there!

Have you seen the new look of Chic Critique Forum founded by Kelli France? Even Chic Critique's Facebook page looks fabulous!

Chic Critique offers Celebrity Critiques from some of the best photographers in the industry so that you can transform your images from weak to CHIC. To celebrate their gorgeous makeover, they are having "Red Carpet Week" this week with giveaways, freebies, and more!

They will be launching a CHIC magazine soon and you can enter their Cover Contest to win a Kelly Moore Bag!

Chic Critique also just announced this Exclusive Live Web Event:

BUY YOUR TICKETS HERE

Sick Day

Who am I kidding... sick week!  Today is the first day that my girls have been back to daycare since last Tuesday.  We are all but covered up in laundry, dishes (especially medicine droppers) tissues, blankies and coloring books.  The girls and I have all three been to the doctor in a week's time, with one ailment or another (somehow the boys got lucky this time).  My desk is a mess (my worst pet peeve), my voicemail is filling up, and my email inbox is overflowing.  My patience couldn't be much lower.  And a full night's sleep?  Well, I have three kids now.  We all know that I haven't had that in ages, right?  ;)

I am asking for a teeny bit of grace today and tomorrow while I attempt to catch up.  If you've contacted me recently and feel you might as well have called your local Congressman, given the lack of response... please don't give up on me.  I'm coming.  I promise.

Chin up.  Vitamins down.  Sweet tea poured (twice).  Music blasted.  Head down.  GAME ON.

Thanks for hanging in there with me.  You're irreplaceable.  xoxo

 

What Her First Christmas Looks Like

Another stocking hung this year.  Twinkling lights and wide blue eyes.  Paper and string, straight into her mouth of course.  Melt-us-all smiles and low, bubbly laughs.  Toys and colorful things all over. Elf pajamas, too many tight snuggles, but never enough kisses.

This year has been such a whirlwind for us.  The highlight, certainly, was the birth of our sweet Charlotte Marin this fall.

Of course, this post is a continuation of the series, "What ____ Looks Like".  I hope you'll visit Gina's blog next to see what wonderful snippets she's captured from her family's life this month:  Gina Oh  |  Arroyo Grande Photographer.  Then continue the circle until you get back to me.  I hope you enjoy the journey, friends.  HAPPY NEW YEAR!!!