She loves to help… and wearing her new apron when she cooks. She helped make almost all of the dinner with grandma for the belated holiday/new year party yesterday.
day 3 {2 cup kind of a day}
day 2 {smiling artist}
Amelia’s most favorite thing is to “make art” – she got a box for Christmas full of art projects (little puppets, things to make, glue, etc) and has been doing them nonstop. She doesn’t want help, she wants to do them herself. She’s such a big girl these days.
day 1 {poppa}
A brand new year, a new chance at a project 365. Don’t laugh… I might just do it this time… I did it once long, long ago…
the color run
Running a 5k was on my 30 by 30 list. I’ve sort of always wanted to run one. In junior high and high school I was always one of the more walking than jogging members of my PE class, the slow ones who could barely finish a mile and were sorely out of shape. I was the opposite of athletic. I remember freshman year of college when I wanted to join the crew team they had a week (more than a week?) of novice training sessions and one of the things we had to do which should have been a piece of cake was to do a warmup of maybe a quarter mile jogging? I was huffing and puffing and seriously out of breath. I may have even threatened vomiting. If I couldn’t run a quarter mile I’m sure the coaches thought I was a joke wanting to be an actual rower. The thing is I am extremely stubborn (I like to call it determined) and wasn’t going to get a little thing called “being out of shape” stand between me and what I wanted – which was to be a kick-ass rower. So I worked my butt off, I learned to row. I learned to jog. I learned to like to exercise. And I was pretty darn proud of myself for how much I improved. Then I stopped rowing somewhere around the last year of college and exercise drifted off my radar again until we were planning our wedding. At which point I got into super fit shape… until I had kids… and exercise fell of the radar AGAIN… until I wanted to lose the baby weight… and well I think you can probably notice a trend. I have a habit of making a habit of being in shape… which I stick to for some duration of time and then slowly drift away from.
Lately I have been doing more yoga than anything else but I missed running and I feel like it gives me a big chunk of time to just think and be in the middle of a busy day. So I set out to do the couch to 5k (again) and get back in the habit. When I heard about the color run from a few of my east coast friends I was sold… running while being pelted with colored powder? How could that NOT sound like fun. I was so disappointed when I found out that my local run was while I was scheduled to be out of town photographing a wedding….
well turns out that hurricane Sandy had other plans… tearing through the east coast and delaying my flight so that I was able to make it to the run after all. Never mind that I got on a redeye flight just a few hours later (and with lots of blue junk up my nose nonetheless) it was SO fun! I couldn’t go to something like this and not bring a camera so I busted out my oldest dSLR and cheapest lens, wrapped everything in a plastic bag (if you want to look classy and professional, there’s really nothing better than having your camera stashed in an old sandwich bread bag) and headed out. One note however … if you plan to do the color run while holding a dSLR please realize that they are heavy, that your arm will start hurting, and that you will probably wuss out of the whole “running” part of the race. I ran about halfway before I started seriously regretting my decision to try to run while holding something like a 3 pound weight which was awkward to hold and encased in a plastic bag. Oh well. The photos were totally worth it.
So without further ado… color run 2012! I’m totally going again next year!
















Easter dresses and bowtie {sewing projects}
Easter was in April – which was about 6 months ago. Yikes. I meant to post these quite a while ago – sewing the kids matching outfits was #25 on my 30 by 30 list. I turned 30 in August and actually checked off quite a few more of the list items, I just haven’t gotten around to writing about them… I really want to do a recap also.
In any case I did manage to get this one done on time and I even had big dreams of making a post about how I sewed these dresses – I whipped them up in about a day without a pattern and (aside from the miscalculation on the length of Edith’s dress… it’s a bit short) was pretty pleased with myself about how well they came out. I want to make them more dresses like this (maybe with a few tweaks or alterations to the technique) and if I do I am hoping I’ll get it together enough to document the process for a tutorial.
Here are a few pictures of the outfits in action –
The dresses had a simple split back lined bodice – Amelia’s closes with little adorable yellow round buttons and Edith’s closes with pearl snaps (hard to get a baby to hold still long enough for buttons). The skirt is just a basic gathered skirt and the sash is sewed on the sides and ties with a bow in back. I actually used leftover fabric from their second birthday party – the same stuff that I made Amelia and Paul’s Easter outfits from the year before out of. The chick/egg design is a repeat as well – that’s what happens when you ask a 3 1/2 year old what they want on the dress – they say they want just what they had last time. Oh well. I still think it’s adorable. Paul’s bowtie was made using this tutorial from say yes to hoboken… super quick and easy!
One more item crossed off the list. Phew!
Happy Anniversary, my love
The end of September just seems to keep getting crazier and crazier. I always have dreams of a big anniversary celebration – a big vacation (a second honeymoon in Moorea would be divine but I know that’s probably a few years away) or at least a night away in a hotel – but then life always seems to have other plans for us. This year’s “other plans” involved the joyful welcoming of my newest nephew to the world. I wouldn’t have traded that for anything… I am SO happy to have him in our lives.
So instead of going away for the weekend we had family time and Ben and I got a few hours to ourselves on Sunday to have a lazy lunch on the beach and go for a walk. It’s funny how this paradise can be right next door all along but you just drive right by without stopping… as we were walking along I remember thinking how beautiful it all is, and how people in other parts of the country might dream of a walk on one of our sandy shores… yet here we are just a few miles away every day of our lives. Pretty darn lucky if I do say so myself.

We finished up the day with a drive up the coast and a stop in my favorite coffee shop for a bit of an afternoon treat.
When I think about the fact that this is our sixth anniversary, it somehow seems impossible. Our wedding is like this glimmering moment in the distant past… so many million lifetimes ago… how much has changed. I cannot remember what life was like before we were together. I’m not me without my love. We are part of a unit, a family, a life we’ve built together. How could so much have happened in just six short years? If so much has happened in the last few years I simply can’t imagine what is coming in the next six – or sixty for that matter.
I love you so, my dear. I cannot imagine my life without you and without our family. Happy anniversary, here is to everything that’s next. I’m so glad you’ll be by my side through it all.

(wedding photo by the image is found)
Almost equidistant {ramblings}
Yesterday I took the kids to Target to get a few things that we needed. Target is like mommy mecca – they have pretty much everything you need in one place. Including (most importantly of all) a Starbucks – because when you are toting around a lot of kids you surely need an afternoon pick-me up.
Having everything in one place is extremely important for me. The length of any trip is not measured by how long it will take me to actually do an errand, gone are the days of sprinting quickly in and picking something up. For me, a shopping trip is measured in terms of how long it takes to get three kids to pick which toy they want to bring in the car, to put everyone’s shoes on, to get three kids buckled into various carseats and settled in with their water or snack or whatever it is that they might need for that trip. It’s finding a double cart (or really – a triple cart) because (heaven forbid) if we can’t find a double cart then someone is going to have to walk and I just know they will walk at the speed of a glacier and complain the whole way about how they wish they could be in the cart. So we find a cart, we get strapped in, we set off, ignoring the stares as people try to wrap their heads around the idea of my mammoth boat of a shopping cart, full to the brim with tiny people.
So Target it is, with one of everything (though maybe not the best priced or nicest) and a latte for mommy.
We pulled into the parking lot yesterday and I immediately knew it was going to be crowded. People swarming and circling around the two rows closest to the store, praying to the parking gods that a spot would open up when they could just as easily park two rows down and walk. I did just that and carried Edie while holding on to Amelia’s hand. Paul gripped tightly onto Amelia and our walking spectacle traversed the parking lot – hollering “chugga chugga choo-choo” the whole way. If I make train noises, they stay holding on.
When we got inside I realized what all the crowds were there for – back to school shopping. How could I have forgotten? It was the first day or first week for so many schools. All the moms and kids wandered the aisles, supply lists clenched in their fists. Back to school. Paul and Amelia are going to preschool but next year they will really have the first day of school. First day of Kindergarten. How did it come so soon? I wandered into the bedding aisle to let the kids pick out a set of sheets for their big kid beds (yellow stripes for Amelia, blue with polka dots for Paul) and saw yet another group shopping in Target that day. College freshmen shopping with their parents for dorm room essentials.
Target has graciously provided lists at various spots around the store. Tear-off sheets with reminders about everything you need to make your dorm life comfortable. Body pillow? Shower caddy? Butterfly chair? I can’t believe that parents are duped into thinking their kids really NEED any of this stuff – but then again I had it all when I was a freshman. I can so vividly remember that shopping trip with MY mom. Wandering the aisles of Target, grabbing one of everything and wondering how my life would be once my parents shut that car door and drove away, once they boarded the plane and I was left, alone, in a new state with no friends. The memory seems so fresh that watching the 18 year old kids peruse the shelves I can actually still feel those butterflies in my stomach. But then it hits me – I’m almost as close in age to the parents as I am to the kids. Woah.
I quickly do the math and right this minute it’s been 12 years since I started college. Assuming all goes well and Paul and Amelia start kindergarten next year and graduate high school on time – we are 14 years from their freshman year. I am almost equidistant. I’m standing in Target, straddling this gap between college freshman and parent of college freshman and I begin to panic. They can’t be that close to college. I feel like I was just there – how can we be THAT close to their first day? I remember my mom collapsing on a bench in a mall in Rhode Island while we were going on a mega shopping spree for my brother for his freshman year. I was still in highschool at the time. She just started crying and said “what if he needs a bandaid?!” I laughed for years at that memory – well if he needs a bandaid, surely he’ll find one. Now I get it. Now I REALLY get it. I’m sure I’ll understand all the more painfully once I get there myself. Luckily I have 14 more years to treasure, 14 more years to prepare. But I’m not sure you can ever really be ready for your babies leaving home.
Almost equidistant. It’s crazy. I don’t know how time got to be so fast. I finish up the shopping trip and push our titanic of a shopping cart back out to the cart corral. We grab our bags and make our chugga choo-choo to the car. I take a deep breath and try to remember – today might be hard, tomorrow might be harder. But they will both be gone so fast. I can’t afford to forget that.
because I love Ira Glass..
A friend of mine shared this amazing video with me – someone animated a piece where Ira Glass is talking about storytelling that I’d heard before as an audio clip – but it’s so much more cool as a video.
Ira Glass on Storytelling from David Shiyang Liu on Vimeo.
I get so easily frustrated by that gap between TASTE and TALENT… in pretty much everything that I do… but I just keep doing it… someday hopefully the gap will get smaler.






