Summer is over, and everyone seems to be back in the city; phones are ringing and my schedule is packed. I am not complaining!
At the same time, this fall is somewhat bittersweet for me – my eldest, Nathan, started going to school full days. It seems so odd to not have him around the house in the afternoons. Despite my younger son’s high maintenance personality, my two dogs, and my relatively large fish tank, the house still seems empty somehow. Nathan has a certain presence – when he is in the house, the atmosphere is just more lively and cheerful! It seems like just yesterday when I took him to his first day of school ever, when he was barely 2 years old. Sometimes I look at my second and hope that he stays little just a little bit longer. Many of my clients have 3 and even 4 children – I now understand why!
Though I take a lot of photographs for my clients, I am not always as diligent with my own children. I have a dilemma – I am so used to my super quick and high resolution SLR cameras that I dislike using my point and shoot. However, I don’t often carry my huge cameras around, hence I don’t end up taking too many snaps of my children! However, I do cherish very much the photos that I do have of my kids. I smile (and sometimes cry!) when I look at photographs of Nathan as a newborn, at six months, at 14 months (when he took his first steps – thank goodness I whipped out my camera for that moment!), and so on and so forth.
Whatever you all do, make sure you take the effort to capture the everyday. People often think of photos when there is a special occasion – first birthday, special holiday, etc. But don’t forget about the everyday – the seemingly trite moments that occur in your family’s life.
I suggest a little project – just for one day, perhaps on a Saturday or a Sunday – take your camera and photograph your own “A Day in the Life.” You don’t have to be doing anything special – you can simply start with your children getting out of bed, then making breakfast, then going to the park, etc. Your day may end in a cuddle in bed and a story or two. Photograph the day. Then actually print these photographs, and then take the time to put them in an album. If you have the inclination, make a scrapbook-type album. You can even design your own book and have it printed (I believe Mac has such a thing). I promise you that you will cherish this album for the rest of your life.
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