The Farm Report
  • I love Wendi

    I love Wendi

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    Yesterday was a great day. One of those magical days where the weather is perfect and the children behave (even Neko!) and I even went to the grocery store with three children and emerged with a smile on my face. Seriously, days don't get much better than that.

    Except when you notice a package on your front stoop, and it's addressed to you. Not one of those Publisher's Clearinghouse deals, but a real package.

    The package was from our friend Wendi in Brooklyn, and it was addressed to me. And I say "our" friend even though she's really Tom's friend from college, but I've sort of taken 50% of the friendship hostage because she's so great. We love her dearly for so many reasons, and not just because she has a terrific name.

    She spent two days standing in our kitchen making our wedding cake, arriving with all her pastry tools by plane from New York less than two weeks after 9/11. She's sent knitted quilts to our children, as well as hats for the whole crew. Did I mention she bucked tradition and wore a red dress at her wedding? And looked fantastic?

    In short, Wendi = Fabulous.

    Anyway, once I had the kids down for naps I opened the box. And there was a scarf—a gorgeous, cashmere, hand-knitted scarf. In the box was a note saying that she knitted this scarf and decided to send it to someone, and into her mind popped me. I'm still smiling. What a fantastic surprise.

    We should all do this more often. Send random things to each other, not on our birthdays, but on a random Tuesday. What a great ray of sunshine in my day.


  • Our newest addition

    Our newest addition

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    Neko is determined to see this one through to a moth. Cross you fingers. Again.


  • Sigh.

    We're having a hard time with Neko right now. The behavior is atrocious. She seems to think the world revolves around her, and that Tom and are here to cook, clean, and wait on her hand and foot.

    I know it's the age. And the stage. The back to school. And then out of school for a week due to Ike. It's her stubborn nature. And my stubborn nature. This too shall pass. Blahblahblah.

    I am now completely amazed when I see women who have grown children and seemingly have their sanity intact.


  • Creative time with Tom

    Creative time with Tom

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    Robots, pelicans, and good times were created.


  • Bridge

    Bridge

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    Today we actually made it through music class without a complete meltdown. This left us with a little time on our hands before we ate lunch, so we went to the covered bridge to run back and forth, like, a hundred times.

    And look! A picture! Of me! I made myself turn the camera around and shoot a quick self-portrait. I didn't even Photoshop out my bloodshot eyes or wrinkles. Hooray for 36 and sleep-deprived!


  • Two turtles walk into a bar…

    Two turtles walk into a bar…

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    …well, actually into my bedroom. At 7:30am, two kids in turtle costumes. Which made me laugh so hard I almost cried.

    Not properly captured in full cuteness here, but you're going to have to trust me. It was hilarious.


  • Beggars, choosers, blahblahblah

    Beggars, choosers, blahblahblah

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    Neko is officially hiding from the camera. She got this new haircut over a week ago (which actually allows her to actually see) but it's taken me this long to snap a single photo of her.

    So when she's 30 and she wonders what she looked like at five, she's going to have to push up her sleeves and Photoshop those ropes out of her face.


  • Ike

    Ike

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    Ike came through on Sunday and blew down trees and power lines and signs and roofs. And half the apples off our tree. I spent a bit of time picking through to find the good ones. Still not the best eating apples, but they're looking way better than previous years. And it makes me a little giddy to see them all in a bucket.

    In the meantime? I'm digging up a good recipe for applesauce.


  • Inhale

    Although this workshop was good for me professionally, I think it's also been good for my soul. The instructor, Cheryl Muhr, has an amazing way about her, and a compelling back story.

    She lost her first child at one week old, for reasons they still don't know. She had taken some digital photos of him, but it was still too painful to print them. So they stayed on her laptop, which sat on the kitchen table. Until the day some person kicked in their back door and stole it, taking the photos with them.

    When her daughter was born a year later, she became obsessed with photography, not knowing how much time they had with her. I'm happy to report she's now a happy, healthy five-year-old who spent a lot of time running around the workshop with her one-year-old sister. Good golly, they were cute.

    But photos? They really are precious. I've always thought this as I somewhat obsessively take photos of my children, but between Cheryl's story and the recent events of Stephanie Nielson and her family, I feel this even more so. I vow to throw myself in front of the camera from time to time, despite the size of my thighs and the state of my crazy hair. And you people reading this? Get ready to be in a few photos yourself. I don't have anywhere near enough of family and friends.

    The other refreshing thing I took away from the weekend was a new perspective.

    Cheryl is not a trained photographer…she's actually a chiropractor. But she loves photography, so she began to do more of what she loves. She freely admits that her technique is less than perfect, that it is sometimes frowned upon by professionals in the industry. When people asked her how she metered or what her histogram looked like, she kind of waved her hands and laughed, "Yeah, I don't do that stuff. I just take pictures. I know my camera, I adjust my settings, and I shoot." And then she moved on, no apologies.

    Clients that are unhappy with their shoot? She sends a simple note with an offer to refund their session fee, and a quick suggestion that perhaps they weren't the right fit. She apologizes for the fact that they were unhappy, but not for her work. She is confident in her work, and will stand by it.

    She only works two days a week. After her son died, being a mother became a priority. She didn't want to miss any more than she had to. She does one or two sessions a week and edits after the kids are in bed. Her prices are high, which keeps her working schedule light. And she doesn't apologize for it. And, yes, she has a friends and family rate and does pro-bono, but her high rates make that possible.

    She's a quick editor, and can finish a photo in just a few minutes. She doesn't obsess about the finer details. Making a photo perfect can take hours, when making it almost perfect can take a fraction of the time.

    She doesn't get angry. She has a motto, "I either change my mind or change my business." If something bugs you enough that you can't change your mind, and you can't get over it, then you need to change how you do your business. It's a waste of time and energy to gnash teeth about things all the time.

    I swear, I'm not building a shrine to this woman, and not all of us have the luxury to live our lives the way she does. But I think she makes some great points. We spend too much time apologizing. For our lack of experience. The times when our performance doesn't meet someone else's expectations. When we draw the line in the sand, a line that some might not approve of. When we choose to make something less than perfect in exchange for a little more wiggle room in our lives. We get angry, but we don't change how we operate.

    So today, when school was canceled due to continuing power outages, I ignored the laundry. And thinking about dinner. And the other hundred things on my to-do list. I gathered up all three of my children and headed for the zoo. Neko rarely gets to join us on these trips this year, so I beamed as I looked at three children in my rear-view mirror. On this sunny, perfect-weather day, we danced our way through the zoo, and I breathed in every little bit of them I could.

    Ironically, I forgot my camera. So you'll just have to imagine a photo here.


  • Back home

    Back home

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    I'm back home. And exhausted.

    Tom is more exhausted, having handled a weekend with kids topped with a bonus day, a massive windstorm, and spending 12 hours without power.

    I leave you with three shots from the weekend I edited during my Quest For a Flight Home.

    Back to regularly scheduled blogging and basket purging tomorrow.