More on the subject of truth

After I wrote the last six people twelve times post, I immediately wanted to delete it.

It was incredibly hard for me to write, and also incredibly hard for me to allow others to read how I feel. How I truly, deeply feel about a subject. Especially about a subject as emotionally charged as parenthood. I am scared that when I truly share how I feel, no one will understand, and I will be alone.

I am not, nor have I ever been, a very private person. I am an open book. In person, I have no problem sharing personal anecdotes even with a stranger. I don’t take myself very seriously. I rarely get embarrassed. I have nothing to hide. I operate below the surface, meaning I don’t want to bother with small talk. I want to dig in and talk about THINGS. Too Much Information? Never. Not with me. I want to really know the people that come into my life. I want to be a safe place for them, so that they allow me in. And I am a lot of the time, and they do a lot of the time. I think it is what allows me to take the photographs I take.

A lot of people just feel safe with me.

The problem is, I don’t often give myself the same safety net of myself. I have operated most of my life perpetually worried about how I come across. How others see me. I have obsessed for hours after a party about the things I have said or not said. I have chosen not to walk on a busy street alone, for fear of the eyes on me as I cross a busy intersection, and what they may sum up about me from a split second. I have chosen not to stand up for myself or my children, at times, to different authorities (medical, educational, etc), because I want to believe in them, I want to belong, and because I doubt myself. I have put others over myself and my own opinions and thoughts more times than I can count. I have held back on my opinions on politics, religion, child rearing, family, alternative medicine, organic food, vaccinations, the list goes on. Personal anecdotes are one thing – personal opinions and feelings are something entirely different.

I have always tragically walked the line of being extremely confident in who I am, to doubting every single little thing I have ever thought. I remember going into ninth grade, and after having to wear glasses since the third grade, finally being old enough to try contacts. Back then, kids in glasses were teased or bullied. I was teased and bullied. Mercilessly, almost every day of my school education up to that point. Not just about the glasses, but they certainly didn’t help my situation. When my Mom offered the contact route, I remember saying, “No, I don’t need contacts. I like how I look in glasses. If anyone thinks I look like a dork, I don’t care.” Well, I desperately didn’t want to care, but of course I did. The only way I could gain some control was by saying “I’m choosing to wear these stupid glasses dammit! So screw you if you don’t like it!” The only way I could make myself feel better was to fake that confidence. I fully bought into the adage: Fake It Until You Make It. I just thought someday I would make it!

The tag line I chose for my business, “Just Be You”, is so much more than a tag line. It came to me in the middle of the night, many many years ago. It is a flashlight through the dark into the deepest part of my soul – it is me telling me, “It is okay Tara – just to be. Just be whoever you are. The important people won’t care about the messy bits, the ugly bits, the opinions that differ from theirs – they will love you anyway.” It is my mantra, my meditation, my mission statement. But often, it eludes me.

Here on my blog, I talk specifically about a lot in my life. Like I said, I am an open book. A lot of beautiful personal anecdotes are written here. A lot of talking about the other five people who live in my house. But not a lot of talking about me. About my personal opinions. My personal feelings. Also, here on my blog, I have always limited my focus to one thing: Happiness With A Capital H.

When I started this blog, I was being treated for depression. I started it for two reasons. One was to keep in touch and share photos of my children to our far away family and friends. The other was to help me focus on the good in my life. To try and help me realize I had a reason to live, and exactly what those reasons were. It worked. I started seeing things I hadn’t noticed before. I started writing about things I hadn’t noticed before. I started photographing things I hadn’t noticed before. And many of you reading this now were here, reading then.

It has been five and a half years since I started writing and focusing on all the good in my life. I am no longer being treated for depression. I have fought hard and won that battle. To those of you still in it, my heart goes out to you with deep empathy. My specific depression had a lot to do with the choices I made early in my adult life, and why I made them, and on the slow steady drain of mothering four small children all at once. Three years ago I decided I was done with medication and the side effects. After six plus years on and off anti-depressants, I wanted to see what my new baseline was. I slowly, sickly, painfully weaned off with the help of a chiropractor. She helped my body come off the drugs and she continues to help me stay healthy and balanced. That was enough for awhile, but soon the depression and hopelessness began creeping back in. So, I began going to therapy. And my life changed. She helped me realize the why of my depression. And how to move forward with all of the pain and knowledge that comes along with that.

She also helped me to realize that I am doing myself a disservice by only focusing on the good.

I want and need to focus on the truth of my life.

Meaning, I don’t have to change what I am doing – I just need to round it out with a good dose of reality. I need to be able to look and ponder over the good and the bad. The happy and the sad.

I do not want this blog to be a place where people come and then leave, feeling depressed over my ‘fantastic life’. Possibly thinking that I have no suffering. That I make no mistakes. That I have no bad days. That I don’t fail. That I’m not a jerk sometimes. That I look cute every day. That my family is perfect. I only recently came to realize that this could be the case. And if this sounds familiar to you, let me just say to you: I AM SORRY. I am sorry I haven’t realized that it is equally beneficial to show you both sides of my life.

All of my focusing on the good, the happy, the sunshine moments – what I did to make myself feel better – was actually a fantasy I was clinging to, and I was leading other people to believe was my only reality. The fact is, I do focus on those moments. They are truthful. I have never made anything up. I do tend to “look on the bright side”, “see the silver lining in every cloud”, and “drink from my half full cup”. But when that is all you, my reader, gets to see – you never get the full picture. And when that is all I, the person living it, choose to see, I can’t see my whole life the way it actually is. I can’t make changes or see problems. I can’t help someone like Mckenna. The day after I posted a truth like the one I am currently struggling with in regards to Mckenna, I could see that. You got a bigger picture of my life. *I* got a bigger picture of my life. A more truthful picture. We all have our unique struggles. We aren’t alone. And that was a big exhale.

I have felt a shift occurring within me for some time, of me not wanting to sit on the fence of who I am any longer. I have made a lot of changes since I started this blog. And yet, I have kept what I write here pretty static. Pretty generic. Pretty focused on the good. The Happy With A Capital H. Today I hope to give you a much more full picture of who I actually am, right now.

So – here is where I slap down some truth. I think I do have a pretty fantastic life. The life Jeff and I have made has a lot of good. And I write enough about that, that I don’t need to get specific about it now. But I also have a lot of suffering, I have a lot of bad days, I constantly make mistakes, I am totally a jerk to people sometimes, and a lot of days I don’t even shower or brush my teeth. I forget things often. I have a double chin and large pores. I get really sweaty when I am shooting. (One of the only things that actually does embarrass me about myself.) I am sixty pounds overweight. Mckenna has visually disturbing scars on 20% of her body, caused by catching on fire in 2005, and caring for them, and her, takes a lot of work. Some days I wish my kids would disappear so that my house would stay clean and I could have a break. My house is almost always messy. I don’t really have many local friends. I feel lonely a lot. But I am learning to like that loneliness, and learning what to fill it up with that is good for me. I wish I had paid more attention in all of my History classes, Geography, and Economics, because I am a dolt when it comes to those subjects. I make up for it now by being extremely curious and learning as much as I can about the past, and the history we are making today. I voted for Obama, although I don’t think he is the cure for all of our problems. In person, I curse like a sailor and have quite the naughty sense of humor. I just don’t necessarily feel that the internet is the place for me to express that. I cringe inside when I hear the name George W. Bush. I support gay marriage, and feel that the LGBT person is equal to me in every way. I am not religious. After having been kind of “half-religious” most of my life, (Episcopalian, then Christian, then Mormon), my belief system is best understood by reading this, from the American Humanist Association.

If any of those things surprise you, or make you no longer want to read my blog, I understand. And not in a glasses versus contacts way. I really and truly understand because it means you have the full picture of who I am, and you are free to make a choice. I respect your choice. I would hope that this wouldn’t change how you feel about me. But I understand if it does.

And something I didn’t go into on that last post. I didn’t get specific enough about what I was dealing with. My daughter Mckenna has an undiagnosed neurological disorder that causes her to have major agitation over simple household noise, major issues transitioning from one thing to another, (even something as simple as getting out of the car), and obsessive compulsive tendencies. She is unpredictable in when she will melt down, but melt down she does. And often. In a meltdown she screams, she will try to take off her clothes, she will lay down on the ground. Often in public, right where people have to walk around her. She will stop everything she is doing, like a stubborn horse you can’t get to move an inch. You pull and yank on the reigns and plead and beg and they just dig in their heels. So does she. She will yell curse words. This started in middle school – she doesn’t know when not to curse like the rest of the kids. (Around teachers and parents.) She has zero social or safety awareness. She has no idea people like their space, and will walk up to someone and touch them inappropriately as she says ‘hello’, or ‘hi, dude!’ She has no idea that she could get hit by a car in a parking lot. In 2006 she left our house unannounced twice, and took off on foot. One time before 6am, when everyone else was asleep, the other time when the kids were playing outside and I was upstairs folding laundry and didn’t realize she had left. Both times we were frantic to find her, and were lucky we did. After her second attempt, we purchased a $300 personal GPS system that she had to wear for months. If she got more than 10 feet away from the base, her bracelet would ring an alarm. A lot of the time, her safety is out of my control, and I live in fear of what may happen to her next. She is intellectually disabled with some autistic like symptoms. We don’t know why and we probably never will. It isn’t for a lack of trying. She is fourteen years old and we have taken her to the doctor to try and figure her out countless times.

One of my friends emailed me something that I thought was so poignant, and I want to share what she said here:

“I think what I love most about this post is that it rips away the curtain.  This fancy curtain that is put up for everyone to see how perfect and beautiful it is on the outside, but if you push back the curtain you get to see what’s real, what’s raw.  You get to see the truth.  And guess what…the truth isn’t all that and a bag of chips sometimes.  And I think it is in these moments of complete honesty that humans can truly relate to one another.  Perfection is an illusion….And the sooner we as parents push back the curtain, the better off we’ll all be.  Because there is comfort in knowing that we are not alone in this situation, that people can relate in some fashion.”

I am so ready to rip away the curtain, and in doing so my hope is that I find even more people that I can relate to, as well as that can relate to me.

Just be.

xo

Tara

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522 Comments

  1. I’ve been reading your blog for a long time, it’s probably my favorite of the thousand of photo blogs I visit. I am captured by the way you see life and the way you see the beauty and reality of people – it’s like in just a few moments you have been able to both see and capture who a person or family or moment really IS. Those kinds of things can only be captured by a person who feels deeply and has really understood what it means to be both desperately hurting and deeply joyful. I appreciate your candid vulnerability , I can identify with your struggles, and I am so inspired by both your strength and your willingness to seek council. I think that’s brave…. Thank you.

  2. I just want to say thank you so very much. i am a long-time reader of your blog, as well as many others. And some, although I have never really come away from yours feeling like this, have left me with a very sad and lonely feeling, like, “Gee, why can’t my life be that great” – even though, when I really think about it, my life is great. Sure there are things I would like to be different…but we are not starving, homeless or in any real dire straits.

    so many of the things you wrote resonated with me so personally, that I am sitting here with tears streaming down my face as I write this.

    so thank you again, for being you. beautiful, smart, inspirational you.

  3. I started reading because of your photos. They are BEAUTIFUL (especially the expectant mothers) I am in awe. My sister has a Learning Disabled child of 26 and I can’t believe the patience of the tantrums and daily struggles. I love my niece dearly, but it is very trying even at a distance. She has one older sister and 2 younger brothers that would fight to the death for her, but it took alot of years and maturity for them to realize the uniqueness of their sister. I pray you feel some relief from your burdon by sharing your struggles with us and that life gets easier for you all.

  4. Thanks for sharing. Honesty is beautiful. Raw is beautiful. But I’m sorry. I’m sorry it’s hard. I don’t think people want just “the good”. (At least I can’t imagine why they would). People want real. People want your “bad” too. Maybe at least just being able to share is helpful…

  5. long time reader, first time commenter: I am also a Mom who loves her kids and wants the best for them. It’s a hard job. Really, really hard. I get it. You are not alone in feeling this. And I guess I’m not either.

    I love that you get this. This is why I want you to photograph my family. (Are you planning a trip to Ontario any time soon? We don’t have an ocean, but lots of great beaches!)

  6. What a moving post, to show your human-ness (if that is a word). I think we all have a lot in common as no one is perfect. I feel as you do, as far as the politic lean and have a problem with religion as man has defined it, but do believe in God.

    Your post really shows your inner strength. Bless you and your family.

  7. There is no great and powerful Oz behind our curtains. Just a woman that has do and endure all the same stuff as everyone else. I had the pleasure of accompanying my grandfather to the Academy Awards about 15 years ago, and I remember going into the bathroom and closing the door to my stall. And as I heard the “business” being done all around me, I realized that the woman with her pantyhose around her ankles could be Julia Roberts, Oprah Winfrey or Brooke Shields. That moment of clarity that we are all just women in a bathroom gave me a very different perspective on celebrity and on being a public person. It’s a far more level playing field than we think.

    I don’t think any one of us should have to apologize for honesty and I commend you for your candor. Life is tough. We all have our crosses to bear and it gives me an overwhelming sense of peace to know that there are other moms out there with feelings and thoughts just like mine. While my son’s special needs are different than McKenna’s, many of the things you’ve said in your last few posts sound like I could have said them. Thank you for making me feel not so alone in my own daily struggle for sanity and patience.

    Hugs,

    Tina

  8. girl, if anything I like you more. I know you are younger than me, but I got glasses in 2nd grade and they were the kiss of death in the 70’s. and the braces came in 3rd grade and didn’t end until 8th grade. epic, right?

    My then 9 year old son was burned in 2002. 3rd degree on his right arm and torso. It’s kind of impossible to even think about that first year. makes hell seem like a cool breeze…

    write whatever you want. I appreciate it.

  9. Long time reader, not a frequent poster. Love your photos and your writing. Just a note to say Congratulations to you for being so brave and honest. Life is messy sometimes, and being able to get real with all of it is must be freeing for you. I do think that sometimes we all get caught up in what is expected of us and don’t think about what IS. Blessings to you and your family.

  10. At the 107th comment, I’m sure it’s all been said & read – so maybe it doesn’t need to be repeated, but I wanted to reach out & give ya a big old cyber (hug) anyway! :) well said. So much of it rings true for a lot of us. And yes, we have to understand that we need to experience both sides of the coin to relish either one. Thank you for stepping out on a limb. And crazy enough! You came up in my “twitter follow suggestion” after I had just read your post from the other day (yesterday? the day before? my days all run together anymore!) … and I clicked follow, as I had a hunch that there was “more beneath the surface” a “breakthrough” of sorts was coming … & it made me smile and think, well I’d love to hear more about what you have to say and what you are thinking these days. (And, as a side note: my friend & client won the “Autism Volunteer of the Year” award this year … we just have to do what with can, with what we have, where we are … whatever that may mean to us.) xo.

  11. this was raw, real and incredible. just another reason why i love reading your blog daily. huge admiration for you. you are someone i could have a drink with on a thursday night in my driveway while the kids run around…i curse like a sailor too, so the kids would have to be out of ear shot. you are great.

  12. I wanted to post something after your last post (6 people 12 ways), but was at a loss for words… I could not find a single intelligent thing to say that could express what I was feeling. After this post, I am still searching but feel compelled to tell you that you are an amazing person. Rock on Tara Whitney, rock on.

  13. What you have written today, and in the referred to post, has personally just made me love you even more as a person. What you have written today really resonated with me, in a very relatable manner. A very ‘real’, this is my life, and I’m sure I’m not the only one who sees aspects of themselves in what you have written. I have been a huge fan of yours since I discovered your blog/photography back in the summer of 2006. Even purchased Canon equipment, just like you, when it came time to make that purchasing decision. I still hope to one day have the honour of meeting you, when you make it out to Toronto for family sessions, or if my kids and I are ever fortunate enough to make it out your way. (((hugs))) to you and your family. Know that you have a ton of good thoughts/wishes, and I hope that helps in some small way. xo

  14. i learned a while ago that “the grass is not greener on the other side” and after reading your last few entries it certainly confirms it. but that’s why so many moms and women can relate to you. i think you are a beaustiful, bold and strong woman. your family is very lucky to have you there each and every day.

    have a great rest of the week tara…..

    p.s. i started wearing glasses in the first grade, got my first pair of contacts in the 12th grade. just last year i got a pair of glasses i’m happy to have, but still have problems going out in public with them…lol

  15. Wow!! Amazing. Isn’t it so true how we all love to show only the good side and hide the bad in a closet. I can so relate to this. I have a son with Down Syndrome and sometimes I can’t be prouder to be his mom and other times i just want to run and hide. But I don’t usually show that side to anyone either. Thanks for making it ok to do that. Thanks for admitting you have problems just like everyone else. Thanks for saying that your not perfect. I do often read other people’s blogs and think how wonderful their life all is…why are they so lucky…but sometimes they edit what the world sees(just like most of us do). Thanks for giving us all permission to tell it like it is. It means a lot from one mom to another!!!

  16. Thanks for ripping the curtain away, Tara. You are not the only one who has a hard time expressing the half empty side of life that can come with having a special needs child. It’s so hard to express that side, when you know that there are people out there that are dwelling on the “look” of your child and the preconcieved notions they have of them. I always feel like I’m betraying him when I talk about the less ful aspects of my Dude.
    (((hugs)))

  17. Thank you for sharing so honestly in such a public venue. Your work has always been an inspiration to me and getting to know you through your blog is an honor. thank you!

  18. You just took me a step deeper. Thank you for being “you”. For being truth and putting it out there raw. life is hard and I can’t say i understand what you have going on, but i can say that your honesty has helped change my life a little. Thanks so much for that. You are doing a good thing for a lot of people. :) You’re special !!!

  19. Thanks for pulling back the curtain. And bless you for being McKenna’s mother. I was thinking while reading that truth comes through in your photos. Even though they are happy occasions, I don’t read them as ‘our life is so perfect’. Exposing raw love openly can be as hard for people as exposing raw pain, and you pull that out of people because I imagine you let yourself feel all of life’s emotions.

  20. Amen Tara! EXACTLY the reason we re all reading this! Your honesty! Your simple, beautiful words. Nobody is perfect and we don’t expect you to be either. I understand the hesitation though as most of us surely do! It’s a huge world and showing vulnerability is scary! THANK YOU!!

  21. you are beautiful. thank you for sharing all this. i loved reading the fuller picture of who you are. you are amazing. i *thought* that when i first started reading your blog (around the time of mckenna’s accident) and i *know* that now. thank you for sharing. xx

  22. I’ve read your blog for I don’t know how long and have enjoyed all your stories you have shared..I think your an amazing photographer..meeting you was a rock star moment for me!! I love your honesty and with tearful eyes I say thank you for being you!

  23. oh, tara. this post..

    when others share their stories it makes me realize all over again how deeply, complexly connected we are. my heart goes out to you, love. you amaze me, brave lion woman.

    sending lots of love, courage, peace your way~
    ingrid

  24. You are a brave soul, and you are on the right path. Anyone who bought the illusion that your life was/is perfect wants to believe in a fantasy. And that’s okay. But most of us realize that NO ONE’s life is perfect, very few look like a fairy tale (especially if you have 4 kiddos! ;), and many look very much like yours (your real one that is). xoxo

  25. Your photography has been so beautiful and inspirational to me and reading this, I am in awe of how much you are an even more beautiful person! I send a lot of positive thoughts and vibes your amazing family’s way!

  26. I have been reading your blog for years… many years and never had I felt SO compelled to leave a comment for I felt your posts and every world / photo completed each other so beautifully that I couldn’t even add to it! BUT this is beyond beauty! this is truth and truth has to be acknowledged…. it is a huge sigh of relief to anyone. i understand and i feel each word you have posted… not to take away from your words but i am about to embark on taking a home/virtual school approach to my kindergarten son who seems to be so much like your your little girl. i wonder if he’ll be accepted or wanted when he is older and all i know now is that he is loved and loves us back…. loved completely by his family and that is all i need to get me though each day. so thank you for your honesty and compassion to see the beauty in everyday life…. in not only your family but the families that seek you out to capture their beauty too. <3 you are not alone… there is a world of mothers who feel the same as you and i thank you for sharing your journey!

  27. Talk about slapping down some truth, you let it rip sister!

    As in real life friendships, we don’t owe anybody everything all the time. I think if we strive to live authentic lives we give what we can, how we can, and to whom we can…all in perfect time.

    I’m glad now was the right time for you to share here. It is really an inspiration and gives voice to what a lot of us are striving for. Thank you and peace to you.

  28. It’s funny that the stuff that was probably so scary for you to write down – double chin, 60 pounds overweight, you wish your children could disappear sometimes – that seem so large to you, so revealing, so – OMG, I’m gonna post this and then they will SEE me and KNOW me and JUDGE me and be derisive or scornful – everything you wrote was stuff I have felt and struggle with and talk to my friends about and seems totally So what? when it is written by someone else because it is so familar. It is very hard to write it about yourself, but when I read it, I think, yeah, she’s just like everyone else on this earth and I knew that all along. What I mean to say is, most of the people who read your blog are going through variations of the same thing. Sometimes it IS nice to follow someone online who seems shiny and happy with tons of money and perfect decorating skills who spends hours each day doing crafts – really messy crafts involving paints and glue – with their 3 children while taking incredible photographs. I dig those blogs sometimes and fantasize about her life. But I know it’s all a show. It’s what we do to reassure ourselves that we’ve got it together. If people – perfect strangers – admire us and want to be us, how fucked up can we be? You are cool and lovely and I haven’t changed the way I think about you one iota. I love your photographs and your writing and the personality that lands on the page. I will still check in every day to see what’s new. You can’t scare me away that easily :)

  29. First off LOVED the post and the honesty of it all. Now im going to cut to the chase: Your pose was so RAW i felt i should be the same and share this.

    My brain works similar to yours. I focus on good things… or i become obbsessed with something to serve as my ‘purpose’ and i do it to safise my constant desire to be worth something, to fulfill that void in your heart that everyone has: To have a purpose. I learned a few years ago that it is about the truth. I had gotten to the point where i was through. I had gone deep enough into thoughts on this world and what was “next” (if that even makes since) that i KNEW i had to be owned to something. I KNEW that burning desire in my heart wasn’t for anything of this world. I knew it was for something bigger than me. I know everyone goes through this at some point in their life and i think people like to avoid the fact that EVERYONE has the SAME desire. this is where they “design” themselves. Or they designate something to be their “ruler” “definition” or “essence”.. their legacy. People give themselves to THAT thing. And It serves it’s purpose for a while but we eventually grow out of it. We aren’t idle souls. If we were than nothing would change in this world. We are constantly growing in either truth or lies. (i wrote about it here http://bit.ly/9bzHZT , its kinda MY tag line ;) The truth set me free of every state of wondering about my fait. The ultimate, very familiar, very general truth of this: We are meant to meet our creator. Like almost everybody wants to know their birth parents (plus SO much more) we NEED to meet our creator. and the word MEET is a disrespectful understatement. I should say EMBRACE. He gives us purpose. He NEVER changes, but he is always present. He is the author of ALL good things. He is the ONE and ONLY thing that will give us TRUE joy. He is love. I believe on my precious soul that he will serve as my legacy for as long as i live. No doubt in my mind will His love and promises ever let me down and there is no way i could ever go back to any other kind of so called ‘purpose’. I am His and He is mine. And me saying this with complete confidence in everything i have is worth a freaking ton in my book. And the fact that im only 14 only shows how true it is for EVERYONE. Im not here to bash on any moral issue in this post AT ALL. Everything you said was beautiful and hit me hard because i feel like my mind works the same way, so I often get scared about how im going to take things when it actually matters to other people how i act and my choices. and I really appreciate you saying all this because it opens a lot of curious doors. For some reason i thought I would share something else with you i thought, since I worry about truth A LOT. and if you want to ask me anything about what i just said PLEASE Email me… because im sure I have some questions about what you said in this post. I ABSOLUTELY LOVE reading things like this. It makes me happy that people try for mankind. for the better in things. for unity in some way.

  30. you have an always will be an amazing women to many of us out there. just having to deal with one ‘normal’ child at home makes me wanna run away sometimes. just this morning as i got into my car to come to work i thought – “gees, i wish i could just have 1 our to myself to go to the shop alone”. i can leave my boy at daycare while i go shopping, but i feel to guilty. then when he is with me i wanna ear out my hair. taking an 18 month old to go clothing shopping is a nightmare! i understand some parts of your life… being overweight, wearing glasses, the double chin thingy. my hair that wont work, my clothes that always look like theyre ten years old. the depression – even after one kid. learning to live with the imperfection, will in the end be the perfection we are looking for. good luck with your journey!

    – Lauren

  31. I have to tell you that even though I know this is just one comment among many, your willingness to be honest about your life (when you really do not have to be) moved me. I feel like such a blog stalker for even writing that, but it is true. Your vulnerability is refreshing and so very human. Thank you.

  32. about 6-7 years ago I walked into an obscure scrapbooking store in some weird little corner of Australia and noticed a scrapbook mag with a page about girl who was having a baby called anna banana and she was going to have the best baby photos known to mankind. i wasn’t into scrapbooking or photography – I just happened to notice that page – for some reason it stuck in my head. two years ago when I started enjoying photography I found your blog – happy days :-) i love your stories, your images and your honesty. thanks for sharing!

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