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April 5, 2011 by Kat

A Decade Later

Today is a big day, in our family. Today is the day that my son Brandon turns ten. Ten years old. A decade of life. I’ve realized of late, if he goes off to college at eighteen, we have less left with him in the house than we’ve already spent. What seems so long at the outset, with all of the sleepless nights and diapers, is really so short, when you’re on the side of looking back.

I shared this image, snapped with my iPod on a neighborhood walk, a couple of weeks ago. It’s stuck in my mind since then, because it visualized how I feel about my son perfectly. He is my heart, outside myself. We are attached and yet separate. He is still smaller than me, but that won’t last long.

He is at the cusp. No longer child, not yet teenager or adult. He doesn’t want physical displays of affection in public yet his body betrays him. His had reaches for mine as we cross the street, his body leans in as I go to hug him, even if his mouth tells me to stop. At this moment, he still wants me, needs me, in his life.

A rare moment last November when he posed for a few photos.

He has grown so independent, in so many ways. There is so much that he does for himself. So much that I trust him with. He takes his responsibilities seriously… when he remembers. I think I’m starting to define what grown up is: It’s when you remember to brush your teeth by yourself. We’re not quite there yet. Talking to parents of other kids his age, it sounds like a common thing.

I have been pondering, at the decade mark, what my role is as a parent. We’ve moved well beyond the point of protecting him from putting his had on the stove or drinking household cleaners. We’ve moved into more intellectual discussions of how to treat his friends, what is happening to his body, how to deal with peer pressure, taking responsibility for his own actions and decisions. And of course, reminders of basic hygeine seems to be a continual thread of conversation.

All in all, I think I’ve come to the conclusion that my role as a parent, a mother, is to help my son be who he is. He’s not becoming the person he was meant to be, he already is that person. It’s my job to make sure he isn’t forced into being something other than he is, especially as we head into the teen years. That he learns to recognize and follow his intuition, his heart. That he doesn’t fall in the trap of living his life for other people’s expectations… mine or anyone else.

It’s a fine line, isn’t it? On the one had, I spend my time reminding him of expectations (Brush your teeth! Pick up your clothes!) and on the other I’m talking about helping him learn to avoid living by the expectations of others. That’s the mine field we’ll have to carefully cross in the teenage years. We’re not quite there yet.

Taking a self-portrait with his Nintendo dsi at a car museum last weekend.

For right now, I just want to bottle this moment and put it in a jar for safekeeping. This smart, quirky, energetic, obsessive, happy-but-sometimes-moody ten-year-old boyness. This beautiful spring morning in Italy, with the birds singing and the trees sprouting leaves, when my son still wants and needs me. This moment when my son will reach for my hand at the crosswalk and say, “Mom, have I told you about…”

Filed Under: The Kat Eye View of the World Tagged With: family, Italy, personal growth

April 3, 2011 by Kat

Following a Dream

I am musing today on transportation at Mortal Muses, with an image of–what else–a scooter! Click on over there to see a companion image to this one. The image posted there is my favorite of the two.

This lovely find was another in a back alley of Ortygia in Siracusa, Sicily. Ortygia was scooter heaven. Streets too narrow for cars and a chilly, off-and-on rainy day led to an emptiness that is perfect for my photography. I would have loved to study this scooter with my camera more, but just as I started shooting the owner came out and got ready to leave. I did ask him if I could photograph it for a moment, and he nicely stepped away so I could take one or two more photos (this is one). I showed him the images, thanked him and then let him go on his way.

It’s probably no secret that I have a dream of owning a scooter, after living in Italy. I’ve taken one step toward that dream, by signing up for a Motorcycle Basic Rider Training course in mid-July after we move back to Oregon. I don’t want to buy a scooter and then discover I hate it, so I’m going to take this course and get my bearings and hopefully my motorcycle license. I also don’t want to let too much time go by, and let normal American life wipe out remembrance of my Italian scooter dream, so I’ve committed myself now. I’ll let you know how it goes come July. 🙂

Switching gears… along the lines of my post yesterday on claiming your artist, I later read this post by Stephey Baker at Marked by the Muse. It seems she and I were on the same wavelength! If you resonated with my post yesterday, I encourage you to check out Stephey’s article as well. Each little piece of information, each little insight will take you a step closer to claiming your artist. It you want to, you can do it.

Filed Under: The Kat Eye View of the World Tagged With: alley, claim your artist, creative, Italy, Ortygia, scooter, Sicily, Siracusa, texture

April 2, 2011 by Kat

Claim your Artist

With everyone born human, a poet — an artist — is born,
who dies young and who is survived by an adult.
– Charles-Augustin Sainte-Beuve
This morning I came across this quote in the introduction Julia Cameron’s Vein of Gold, the sequel to her amazing book The Artist’s Way which I read early in my creative journey. I’ve had Vein of Gold on my shelf for some time, but it wasn’t until this morning that I looked at the shelf and decided to pick the book up. It’s time for me to revisit the topic of creativity in more depth.
Within the first few pages, she has already touched on something that I believe at my core: We all have an artist within us. You may not have realized or rediscovered it yet, you may not have claimed it yet, but the artist is there. It’s the same artist who approached a new box of crayons with glee when you were 4 years old. The same artist who doodled on your notebooks in junior high. Who brooded over which songs to include to create the perfect mix tapes (er, playlists) as a teenager.
We all create. And a person who creates something, brings something new into the world that wasn’t there before, is an artist. I can name you an artist, but that doesn’t matter. The only person who can truly name you as an artist is… you.
Julia writes this in the introduction of Vein of Gold: “…you will reclaim your keys to the creative gifts locked within you. You will discover that the keys have been yours all along. This means, of course, that it is not my place to name you an artist. Such power would be lovely, but it does not reside with me. You are the one who must name yourself. You are the one who must seek – and claim – your creative destiny. No one else can do that for you, but you can do it for yourself.”
Are you ready to claim your artist? I did, some time ago here, and it was an amazing, empowering experience that has changed my point of view in so many ways. You can too. Come with me as I explore the “art + creativity” part of my personal equation more here in the future. Maybe, just maybe, you’ll be able to claim your artist and find your own personal equation along the way too.

Filed Under: The Kat Eye View of the World Tagged With: art, creative, Italy, personal equation, personal growth, shadow, Sorrento, tree

March 31, 2011 by Kat

Share Your View: Group of Three

The best laid plans sometimes go awry! When I went into Flickr today to pull some of your “group of three” images from the Exploring with a Camera pool to post here, all of the sharing had been turned off. At first I thought it was just a couple of people but it must be a Flickr-wide issue because everyone has sharing turned off.

Instead, I’m improvising to share with you this group of three pots spotted on the streets of Ravenna. I’m never at a loss of photos to share! It’s actually quite fun, my family gets into Exploring with a Camera along with me and after I’ve posted a new topic they are most helpful in pointing out possible images on the theme as we travel. My husband spotted this group!

This post is about you though, and your view. Since Flickr is acting up, please be sure to link in your Group of Three images below so that we can all enjoy them. I love the different finds and compositions you all have shared so far!

Filed Under: The Kat Eye View of the World Tagged With: group of three, Italy, plants, pot, Ravenna, share your view

March 30, 2011 by Kat

Circling Around

No matter how much we travel in Italy, I always find myself delightfully surprised. Each town has its own claim to fame, but often it’s the little things that are more interesting. Our latest visit to Ravenna was no exception. The town is known for the amazing Byzantine mosaics of its churches, but it was the number of bicycles on it’s streets that captured my attention. They were everywhere, all shapes and sizes and colors – compositions just waiting to be captured.

I especially had an eye out for groups of three, as always happens with my Exploring with a Camera theme. I loved this little family of three bicycles. It’s looks like a family, doesn’t it? Look how they are all grouped, overlapping, in each other’s space. Maybe I see it that way because my family is a family of three, and our images are always a reflection of our selves. Upon review today I also discovered the row of circles – wheels, chainrings, hubs – that forms a chain along the bottom of the image. How cool.

Ravenna as a bicycle city was a delightful find, a surprise that you likely won’t find mentioned in any guidebooks. That circles me around again to where I started – there is always something interesting to be found in the towns of Italy. For me, it’s always in the streets, not the churches.

Filed Under: The Kat Eye View of the World Tagged With: bicycle, group of three, Italy, Ravenna, street

March 28, 2011 by Kat

A Personal Equation

art + creativity + photography = bliss
I’ve been coming back to this equation over and over again in my journal lately. It was only a matter of time until it showed up here. It’s a personal equation, something that speaks to me at a core level. I’ve been exploring what it means…
art = all of that which has been created before, by others. Art includes the formal definition of art, such as the paintings of the great masters, but it is also so much more. Art is the design of a building, the cut of a dress. It is the interpretation of musical notes written on a page. It is the combination of spices and ingredients. It is all that we experience, that comes from outside of ourselves.
creativity = a process, a practice. Creativity is not a “thing.” It is the swirl of ideas, the stringing together of old and new. Creativity is where observation, knowledge and action meet. It is the process by which we learn to make sense of the world around us. It is innate, in each of us. It is what allows us to string together words into a sentence and actions into a life.
photography = an artistic medium, a personal form of expression. My photography is the combination of all of the art I’ve seen and experienced in my world run through my own personal creativity filter. It is the way I can share my vision. Photography allows me to share the stories I see, in the details of life around me. Like this bicycle, in Ravenna. Photography is my art, given back to the world.
Input, process, output.
Art, creativity, photography.
Combine these three ingredients and I get bliss. What do I mean by bliss? I mean happiness that goes beyond the moment, to the core of my being. It is the connection to the heart and soul of who I am, who I always have been, who I always will be. It is something deeper than a pretty picture, a fleeting emotion. 
art + creativity + photography = bliss
It takes all three to make the math work. Without one of them, the equation would be unbalanced. It might equal “content” or “satisfaction,” but certainly not bliss.
I imagine that we all have our own personal equation. Part of our life’s journey may be to define it, as we live it. Do you know yours? If not, I’m guessing that creativity is in your equation somewhere too. Start there, and see what begins to fill in the blanks.

Filed Under: The Kat Eye View of the World Tagged With: bicycle, creative, door, Italy, Ravenna, store display

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