Category: Expressive

  • decorating with what we already have

    decorating with what we already have

    Decorating with What We Already Have — Yesterday, I got a wild hair and decided it was time to re-arrange our living room.

    Oliver has been complaining about the fact that we have to turn our smaller couch around any time we want him to be able to sit there to watch TV; our TV is mounted above our fireplace.

    We have a fairly large living room that featured two couches; a leather couch and a smaller green fabric two-seater couch. Most of the time, in case we have company, we have had the green couch facing the coffee table and the other couch. That meant that the couch needed to be turned around when we had movie nights and more people would be watching the TV.

    A little over a year ago, gracious friends gave me a settee for the studio. It will still be used for studio purposes. But in between shoots, the settee is going to live in our living room now. I moved it in, moved the leather couch and our coffee table way back into the previously unused space, and turned the green sofa around. I put the cream settee and the green sofa back to back. We will use the cream settee and the side chairsfor visiting with people. The green couch will be used by the kids or anyone when we are all watching TV together.

    I am thrilled with the outcome. I added the sitting pillow from the peacock chair from the studio, as well as the “You Are My Sunshine” pillow that Jared gave me for Christmas to the cream settee. Our whole living room looks bigger and more inviting.

    I had to be sure there was adequate walking room both between the cream settee and the leather couch for walking. Our primary entry into the house is the double doors right beside the leather couch. We really do not have a back side to our home. We have two driveways and the front door has steps. So, we mostly invite guests to come in the back double doors off our back driveway, by the garage where we park. We use the front door mostly for taking the dogs outside, or for guests that just want to come to the front door.

    Decorating with What We Already Have

    It feels like a new living room, and not a dime was spent on re-decorating. This is my favorite way of re-decorating because our belongings we have are more than adequate for our needs and to be honest- for most of my wants.

    I did discover the limits of our luxury vinyl plank flooring that we installed when we moved in two years ago. There are small, slight scratches below the coffee table and below where the leather couch used to sit. They don’t bother me; actually, the pattern of the flooring makes any scratches look like they belong and blend really well. So, it adds a sort of lived-in character to the flooring. I stand by my earlier statements on social media that this flooring was far and away the best decision we could have made as an upgrade when we purchased this house in late 2021.

    All of the pieces in our living room are either hand-me downs, or sentimental, aside from the leather couch. Our friend Johnny Jackson made the coffee table, our friends the Boyd’s gave us the piano, my parents gave us the green chair and sofa. My parents also gave us the cream chair after my aunt gave it to her, after my Nannie gave it to my aunt. (We pass furniture around in my family a lot, so things rarely actually leave the family.)

    The cream chair’s upholstery has seen better days thanks to our cats, but that chair is well over 100 years old at this point. It originally belonged to my grandmother’s aunt, who was born in 1870. It is still as sturdy as the old days, having been reupholstered at least once. It is one of my favorite chairs in the house. It is so much higher quality than anything you can walk into a store and buy these days.

    Thankfully, keeping scratching posts around the living room really does quite a lot to re-focus the cats’ energy on not tearing up the furniture. We didn’t discover that fact early on, but they’ve been in place over a year now and it’s really saving our furniture.

    That’s all I have for today.

    Love,
    Caroline

  • financial (and perspective) overhaul

    Mom Photographer

    Financial (and perspective) overhaul — I am writing today from the skate park with Oliver.

    Today I said goodbye to the Fuji GW690III film camera, as well as the Fuji X30 digital camera. They got sold at KEH to pay the difference for the iPhone 15 Pro Max I traded my old iPhone 13 Mini for last week. Verizon gave me a very decent deal on the trade-in, but there was a difference and the sale of these two cameras that basically always sit unused more than made up for the deficit.

    When I bought the Fuji GW690III, I thought I would take it regularly to sessions and weddings. It came along like twice, but it never found a solid place in my work flow.

    And to be completely honest, the iPhone 15 Pro Max replaces the “purse camera” function that the Fuji X30 served.

    The Christmas break was a time of introspection and expense assessment, along with re-assessing both current and future priorities. It has been a healthy introspection period and Jared and I (mostly me) made a lot of changes to current expense obligations that will serve us well in 2024.

    I have been a domain name hoarder for a long, long time. I won’t say how many I had, but it was a lot. For no good reason. Well, I thought they were good reasons when I bought them, but those purposes no longer serve me. So the great majority of them will lapse this year. I am 100% okay with that fact. I purged over the series of several days, bit by bit. It was sort of like shedding layers of an identity that no longer serves me.

    I projected our income for the year, taking all things equal as though there would be no business income to rely on, and then I projected all known expenses and obligations for 2024, both personal and business. Then, I re-assessed every expense we have had for the past couple of years. 2024 will be the year of actually consuming the online education resources I have already bought into but may or may not have already used. There will be no more gear purchases unless something is sold, and that will not happen this year as everything is very useful at this point, unless I do decide to sell the gf 35-70 but I doubt it.

    I still have to do it but I have already made a list of the regular groceries we have purchased and like to have on hand on a regular basis, but I am going to go through and itemize them by price and make out a realistic grocery purchase rotation. We have to be careful because grocery budget does get out of hand for us. Our restaurant budget has been out of control the last several months, as well.

    Financial (and perspective) overhaul — Part of what has helped with this finance overhaul has been the solid step toward self-acceptance of the fact that, for all purposes that matter, I am a retired person at 44 years of age and our budget should reflect that fact, and there is zero shame in it, either. This photography business is fun and I love that I can do this, but the reality is that it is likely that I will be on SSDI for the rest of my life (well, until it converts to regular Social Security when I reach traditional retirement age), and 12.5 years into this SSDI journey I am finally coming to a place of self-acceptance with it.

    Next to work on is getting over the shame that it has taken me over a decade of my life to accept that I am essentially retired. But that is work for another day.

  • happy 2024!

    happy 2024!

    Happy 2024 — Good morning– Happy 2024!

    I chose not to stay up for festivities on New Years’ Eve this year. I opted for a 9 PM bedtime.

    It’s part of a decision I’m making to favor health and wellness over late nights in general. I was the first up this morning, though I slept later than I planned. So far, I fixed the sticky front door, have tended to the dogs, have laundry going, and have made a general plan for the day already this morning. It will be a good day.

    I have resisted blogging (and journaling) for the better part of two years. For the past several days, I have made journaling a bigger priority. I am feeling better for it. It might be time to return to the blog, as well.

    For a long time I have really wanted to pick and up and move to Atlanta. But the last several weeks I have been reinvesting myself in our home. I remember why I loved it so much when we bought it. (Plus, walking away from a 2.875% interest rate would not be the smartest idea). It is utterly amazing how just a few simple tweaks (that haven’t cost much, if anything) have made all the difference. I am trying to reinvest myself in our community a little bit as well. However, our church home will definitely remain in Atlanta. I am starting to think about getting out to volunteer somewhere. Maybe Open Hands will be the first stop.

    Happy 2024 — Redecorating with Art We Already Had

    Yesterday, I spent a good portion of the day moving artwork around different places. I rediscovered a watercolor my mother-in-law did that I always meant to hang but never got around to, a beach scene, whose frame glass had long since broken. I was able to re-mat it with a mat I had in stock for photo prints. All it needed was an 11×14 frame. When Jared and I went out for another project last night, we picked up a $13 frame for it. Voila! New artwork for our living room. The featured photo is the beach scene in question, as well as the new mat and frame.

    I posted a photo of the artwork I moved in the kitchen on my personal Facebook, but here it is, as well. I’m super-happy with this configuration. From left to right the paintings were done by my Mama, Lucy King, two by a lady my French host family was related to when I went on a trip in high school, Gerald Byrd, and Laura Smith.

    There is nothing to be done about the intercom command center on the left side. Jared would like to take them all out, but it would be a tremendous undertaking. Also, our doorbells are tied into the system. I haven’t given up on resurrecting the whole thing. The command center works and so do a few of the intercom panels throughout the house. But none of the doorbells on any of the three sides of the house work, and two of the three panels in the boys’ rooms do not work.

    Art with Personal Meaning

    Most of our belongings have some sort of personal meaning, and the art that hangs in our home is no different. The French watercolors are actually a funny story. I knew the lady was going to paint something for me because they asked me to pick between a few scenes for her to watercolor. They’d taken me to her home. She was such a talented artist. I picked a goldfish scene from a very old Japanese postcard. But the other scene is a road with a house and a castle in the background, which is the exact scene in Kaysersberg. We were there touring and my French host’s father very nearly ran over us, lol. He was a passenger bus driver. We were out in the road and had to hightail it out of the way quickly. When I looked up I saw it was him driving and he very clearly saw me. We all laughed when she presented me with the both paintings. I understood exactly why she had painted it.

    I wish I knew the name of the artist. I called her the French Sarah Belle while I was there. She was not exactly related to my host family but she was close friends with them, kind of like our Sarah Belle was here. She only signed her work as “GW,” and I never knew her name while we were there. Google searches based on those initials with searches in the St. Die region in France reveal nothing. I’m sure she’s long since passed away, as she was an older person in 1997.

    There’s a story about Lucy’s goat painting as well. Jared and I met online, and we watched a lot of movies over the phone together while we were dating. One of those movies being “Notting Hill.” I think Jared had the “Happiness is not happiness without a violin-playing goat” quote on his profile on Lavalife. So when Lucy painted the goat (even without the violin), I knew Jared had to have it. That painting was his anniversary present one year.

    Laura’s painting of the Hubbard Slacks Factory in Bremen just reminds me of Ike and George, my Daddy’s parents. We’d always go through Bremen on the way to Rockmart when I was little. The cut through big Highway 27 hadn’t been built yet so 27 went through downtown Bremen. I swear I remember when I was super little (I must have been super little because George died when I was 5), driving through there with Ike and George and Ike talking about somebody she knew who worked there forever.

    My Mama gave the flowers and apples painting to either either my aunt or one of my grandmothers. I don’t know who; we play “musical belongings” in this family and stuff ends up in other people’s household all the time. But I know she painted it in 1982 because the year is on it. I bet she gave it to one of them for Christmas that year. If I had to guess, because I don’t remember it hanging at my aunt’s or Nannie’s, I bet she gave it to Ike and then Lollie ended up with it after Ike died in 1994.

    The Gerald Byrd piece is the newest addition. It came into the house because Jared and I got tickets to his painting party on December 16th, a couple of weeks ago. The theme was abstract art and the point of the painting party was really to do a new piece yourself. But I love Gerald’s art and wasn’t really interested in doing a piece myself, so I spoke up early in the demo piece and claimed it instead of painting one myself. Then watched him paint it for the whole class. It’s a reminder of a super fun night where we met some really great people, and we got to visit with Gerald and his pup Andi for a little while, It was a really fun date night.

    Happy 2024– Meet Arthur

    Arthur made an appearance on Facebook yesterday, too, and I learned that Arthur has a cousin, lol!

    This is Arthur. My aunt named him.

    Arthur was painted by my Nannie’s first cousin, Inez, sometime before 1925. He lives in our bedroom now, but for all my life until 2012 he lived at the end of my Nannie, my grandmother’s hallway. That hallway was dark even in daylight most of the time, so Arthur was ominous and scary to me as a kid. My aunt says he scared Nannie when she was little too, when she hung in Inez’s mother’s living room.

    Inez and her Mama painted a lot of stuff– my aunt and my Mama have a lot of their paintings– oranges, different flower scenes, a moonlight beach scene.

    When I posted him on Facebook, a friend of the family posted that their relative had also painted an identical scene to Arthur, and posted a picture of their family’s painting! My whole worldview shifted a little bit, lol, because I had always, my whole 44 years, thought Arthur was an original. But I called my aunt, and she was not one bit surprised that Arthur has a cousin. She knew of the friend in question’s relative and that person would have known Inez, who painted our painting, and they probably took lessons from the same person. So they probably used the same model for the paintings. It’s a very cool story. The community those folks grew up in and spent their lives in was really small and close-knit at the time.

    I feel really fortunate to know (and be related to) some really talented people.

    Making Home Less Scary

    Jared working on our front porch

    The scene here is not nearly as bright as it is in the photograph. This is our front porch, and last night the string lights went up. I am hoping this is a permanent solution to make our front porch less treacherous at night, especially when one of us needs to take the dogs out but also for when we have guests coming up and down the steps on the front porch.

    The two lights by the front door do not give off really any light at all by themselves for some reason, so it has been really dark out there for a long time. It doesn’t bother the boys or Jared to take the dogs out there by themselves in the dark, but it bothers me. This will greatly help, as the street lights do not light up our yard at all. We were able to use command hooks to hang the lights, and I have ordered some brick clips to secure the outdoor extension cord powering the whole thing. Thankfully, there are power outlets on both sides of the front porch. Those power outlets are another indication that whoever designed this house was brilliant; we’ve known that since we looked at the house the first time.

    Happy 2024 — Today’s Agenda

    Today’s agenda includes working some in the studio, in the garage. We have to figure out a long-term solution to the power situation out there, which will likely involve calling an electrician. Eventually, I want a mini-split to heat and cool the whole thing. But, I think that is going to involve a whole second air conditioning unit. The house borderline needs one anyway. Not a today-type problem. But, the studio is supposed to double as an additional living area, especially when family who are allergic to cats visit.

    There is still a dramatic lot of painting to do in the studio. Eventually the plan is to cover the popcorn ceiling with black decorative tiles. I also intend to continue the faux concrete polishing I started in October. The garage doors and tracks will remain in place because with white backgrounds, the outdoor lighting is pretty essential to getting the shot. I would have liked to have taken the tracks down and covered the doors, but Jared has convinced me it’s not practical. I am okay with that fact now

    For today, it will be enough to concentrate on the sheer amount of cleaning there is to do, because there is a ton of it.

    There are two huge closets in the studio. One of them is Jared’s office, and for now the other contains outdoor equipment and tool storage. The plan is to clear out the leftover things in storage in our tall finished crawlspace and store outdoor equipment in there, and then turn that second storage closet into a changing room and storage for the studio.

    Jared is re-hauling his office today, too. A much-deserved space for him.

  • a different kind of selfie — atlanta, ga photographer

    a different kind of selfie — atlanta, ga photographer

    A Different Kind of Selfie — Three days ago, I photographed my back. It was compulsory; I had to do it. And yesterday morning when I got home from taking the boys to school, I sat down and wrote the majority this blog post in an equally compulsory way. I stared in bits and pieces of seconds at the photo in question as I wrote the post.

    I got home from an errand before the plumber arrived to fix our toilet three days ago. In a mad rush to finish and get dressed before the plumber got here, I stripped right in the studio. I got out the camera and tripod and light and just took photo after photo until where I stood, with my back to the camera, and got the whole thing I wanted centered correctly.

    For those of you who may not know, I had/ have severe scoliosis— the curve was 87 degrees when they operated in 1993. I grew a full inch and a half in that 10-hour surgery that saved my life. I found out in college that the curve would have eventually crushed my heart, uncorrected. Last I knew 20 years or so ago, the curve had settled at around 45-47 degrees when all was said and done after the surgery.

    I’ve never really taken a photo of my back, a different kind of selfie, before. I’ve seen the scars, etc. in the mirror, but I’ve never taken the time to really look at it, beyond in passing in the mirror.

    So, thirty years and nearly six months later, here we are and I photographed my back. And I sat here, for a few seconds at the time, staring at it. I can’t look at it for more than a few seconds at the time,

    I am not self-conscious about the scars themselves. As a teenager, I’d pull up my shirt and show the front and back scars (It was a 2-part surgery and I have a scar that winds down my side and around front in addition to the one that spans the entirety of my back), I’d show them off just for fun. When I was younger I’d wear dresses and shirts that would show the top bits of my back scar. It was a sort of “see how tough I am” sort of mentality thing. One of my last psychiatrists said the showing off was trauma response.

    With the photo, a different kind of selfie, what I wasn’t prepared for (though I knew it was there and wanted to see) was the visual evidence that the scoliosis did indeed keep progressing as I have gotten older, as I have gotten more sedentary. It’s unknown but doubtful that the sedentary lifestyle is the sole-cause of the progression. My scar makes a sort of ellipsis shape now, with a mini-S in about the spot where I had a ginormous hump in the lumbar portion of my back as a kid. My bottom end continues the curve, where things should otherwise be straight.

    I wasn’t quite prepared to see the bunched up fat sitting on top of the scar that wraps around my side and up the left side of my back, nearly to my shoulder blade. I’ve known it was there because it makes nearly all bras uncomfortable now. But seeing it there was another thing entirely, not just my reflection in the mirror. As I sit here looking at it now, I see a sort of stretch mark has formed above the fat pocket, and that fat pocket is indeed sitting right above the scar line. It looks like my recent weight loss has left a tad bit of loose skin, even, at the top of the crease in my back. A solid mark of middle age.

    For the photo, a different kind of selfie, I purposefully stood in my most natural, comfortable state, letting my left shoulder droop purposefully. Most people don’t know this, I assume, but when I walk around I consciously hold my left shoulder up much higher than is natural. I got so good at it as a young adult when I was in good shape that I could walk around without it mostly drooping at all. What surprised me about the photo is I expected to see a more pronounced droop than is actually there— in my mind it is more pronounced than it actually is.

    I wasn’t prepared to see the little indentation of the chest tube spot, which would mostly only look like a fat roll indentation in the photo to anybody who didn’t know what they were looking at.

    I wasn’t prepared to see the mottled skin of solid middle age, all along my back, where it used to be creamy smooth.

    I had two different edits worked up, both in black and white. I called Jared over Tuesday night and we agreed on which one was the better edit. The one we settled on has more contrast, more definition to my shapes, shows the scar more completely. The sun was coming in bright through the double doors on the sitting room side of the studio. Eventually I’ll need to get shades to cover those double doors or I am going to have trouble controlling light in the studio; the sun is shining on my right side and on the right side of my hair in the photo, despite having the Lume Cube on full power on the opposite side of the room. (And no, our only neighbors on that side cannot see in those double doors even without shades.)

    This photo, a different kind of selfie, is more than navel-gazing. It allows me to face head-on in a tangible way, beside the ever-increasing presence of pain, particularly in my upper back at night just after I lie down— it allows me to face that there was a force completely beyond my control that has shaped my life in more ways than I can count.

    This photo, a different kind of selfie, probably equally as well represents my humanity, just as much as that little inch-and-a-half piece of the metal rod I have from the top of the rod that had to be cut out in December of 1994, because that silly little twist-tie had popped and the rod had made a nice sized-callous under my skin where it was poking out, leaving me breathless from the pain occasionally.

    And, this photo, a different kind of selfie, helps me come to terms with my age, too. I am painfully, painfully aware that as a teenager, that scar was straight as a line, with no curves in it at all. It is visual evidence of the reason I am now closer to 5 foot 8 inches tall, than the 5 foot 10 inches I used to be. It is visual evidence of fairly severe deformity inside my body. For a perfectionist, that is a hard image to see in oneself.

    On March 1, 2023, about 5 AM in the morning, I felt a sort of “pop” behind my heart area, is the best way I can describe it. It wasn’t painful, but I was awake at the time anyway and it was a sensation pronounced enough that it sort of made me lose my breath as I sat on the edge of the bed. Jared thinks it was a muscle spasm or something like that and maybe it was.

    I’ve had an x-ray of my back since that time and so I know it wasn’t anything that is going to cause issues, at any rate.

    But, I sort of look at that event as a marker reminder that I am living on borrowed time. I don’t know how long I would have lived without that scoliosis surgery when I was 13. I know that having children would have been much more difficult and more painful and more dangerous. I know that I probably wouldn’t have lived to be 44 years old.

    There is a sort of grief, too, that bubbles up to the surface, knowing that while everyone has their trials in life to carry, this particular one has been mine, and mine alone. It makes me tremendously sad that I have been so very hard on myself my whole life, for various extremely trivial, superficial reasons that never really mattered all that much.

    Looking at this photo, a different kind of selfie, brings into crystal clarity the fact that I am grateful that Jared came along when he did, and that I am with the sort of man I was meant to be with all along, despite the fact that prior to Jared there were a few men of questionable character— it’s no wonder at all I was so desperate to be accepted that I lowered my standards, allowing men who had no business in my life to be there, for way longer than they should have been there. I am grateful that Jared came along and taught me what respect from a man really looks like.

    I will never be one for proper boudoir photography. Seeing myself like that isn’t interesting to me. But this exercise has been a big lesson in learning to be kind to myself, and reminding myself that there is more strength in me than I give myself credit for.

    This epitomized my empowerment session. I doubt it will ever live anywhere besides my external hard drive. But the photo exists, for me to see, when I need a few minutes to just remember exactly why my hips hurt late at night, and why my upper back hurts when I lie down first thing in the bed at night, and mostly it’s there for me to remember exactly how strong I really am and have been my whole life long.