Digital Downloads – Numbers

This week’s download is numbers. From 1 to 31, for each day in a month. You can use them for project 365, december daily, or just for fun.



Here’s a peek of what some of the numbers look like:







You can download it here: numbers download.


You are welcome to play with these as much as you want and use them anywhere you’d like. You are NOT allowed to sell them ever. You don’t have to but I’d appreciate a link back if you do use them.

Getting in the Groove

I started this blog on August 2000.



Since we just passed the nine year mark, I’ve decided to try some new things for the blog. Mostly to keep myself regular and posting everyday and also a chance to try out some things I’ve wanted to for a while. So I made a little schedule for myself and as a reminder to myself I am going to post it here and do my best to keep to it.



photos
I will still keep posting daily photos. I want to take more “non family” photos so I will attempt to do more of that. I will still have daily Nathaniel since we’re still in his first year and I promised I will take photos every day in his first year. I will make sure to have at least one photo of David every week. One photo of myself every week. And monthly (ideally more frequently) photos of me and the kids and Jake and the kids and all four of us. Let’s see how this goes.



Here’s a schedule for non-photo posts I want to make daily:

Mondays: I will post a video of something. Either a photoshop/digital tip or a non-digital technique etc.



Tuesdays: A new layout/mixed media art, etc.



Wednesdays: A digital download package. It will have anywhere from 7 to more digital elements in it.



Thursdays: My weekly tag.



Fridays: Books. I am starting to read more and will challenge myself to read a book a week (more coming on this) and on Fridays I will write about the book I read that week.



Saturdays: A photo tip. This will be a tip on photography. Technicals, how to improve, how to use your camera, etc. Just my compilation of this information.



Sundays: A new creative therapy catalyst.



My plan is to also post at least 3 longer journaling-type entries a week. When I look back upon my years of posting here, besides the photos, those are my favorite posts. Here’s to hoping I can make that happen.

Daily Photos – September 3 2009



David caught a ladybug today. He was really gentle and waited patiently until I changed to my macro lens and snapped this shot.



And this one. I love how his wings are folded but out.







The little one and I sat outside in the backyard as David played.







We both watched him and smiled.







And he smiled right back.




The joy of my life. I’m feeling better. Things are starting to fall in sync a little bit and the baby is sleeping a bit better. I see small flickers of light in the distance. Just small ones for now, but light nonetheless…

52 Questions and Techniques – Tag 35



This week’s question is: “What kind of goddess am I?”



Well the first thing that came to my mind, as usual, was someone who loves a lot. But I’ve done a lot of love themed ones lately so I wanted to do something different. I decided to make this one about nature. Nature is what calms me and makes me peaceful. Nature is what centers me. Nature. I am so thankful for it.



This tag was inspired by the amazing Rebecca Sower who awes me each and every single time she makes a piece of art. I pulled out a few nature-colored things I had and just let myself go. I did this really quickly and videotaped myself doing it just as an experiment. It was my first time videotaping so parts of it are off-camera. Apologies. I’ll do better next time. The only thing I added after the movie was some stitching. That’s it.







The song is “Fell in Love with a Boy” by the amazing Joss Stone.

I am combining Emily Falconbridge’s art journal questions with trying a new technique each week. You can see the full list: here.

Daily Photos – September 2 2009



Nothing like a few wicker baskets. Especially ones full of fabric.



Nathaniel loves sucking his thumb lately. He’s found it and he uses it liberally to calm himself down. I think he looks so cute.







For the first time since I started putting him in his bed, he’s been sleeping for over 45 minutes. I know that as soon as I type these words, he will wake up. But, for now, I am just thankful for the magic of it. May it continue.



David’s teacher visited today. I can’t believe he’s only got one more year of preschool. He’s growing up way way too quickly.

Daily Photos – September 1 2009






I love seeing this sign every time I sit at my desk. Thank you Jen Lemen.






David spent the day playing with my punches. He had so much fun.







And so did Nathaniel. When he wasn’t taking his super-power-naps that last like 15 minutes. Ugh.







I am reorganizing my blog for the month of September. Stay tuned. Trying to get better and more planned about what I do here. Not sure why. But I guess why not 🙂 Downloads, and more, are coming, I promise.



Rabbit rabbit.

Thank You – September Kit



This is for A Million Memories September Kit.



Journaling Reads:
When I was a little girl,

if someone had told me
that one day I would give

birth to this stunning child

with these unbelievable
eyes that can see
deep into my soul
with this amazing smile
that can turn my
saddest days into joy
I would never have
believed it.
And yet,
Here you are.








Teachers



This is for A Million Memories September Kit.



Journaling Reads:
David, one of my biggest dreams is for you to love school.



To love learning as much as I do. I know that a big part of this is going to be the school you go to. The friends you have. The way you’re taught. And the teachers.



The teachers make a huge difference.



They can embarrass you, make you feel small, and too scared to explore, wonder, and ask.



Or they can make you soar.



They can make you look forward to getting up every morning and go to class. They can be the reason you can’t wait for Mondays to come. They can be the beginning of a lifelong desire to learn.



I always hoped that you’d get to be lucky enough to find one of those teachers. The one that you will remember forever. The one that instilled joy in your heart.



Maybe, right now, you’re too young for that. But that’s ok. I think, for now, I just hope that you have teachers who welcome you with open arms. Who listen to you and care about you. Who encourage your curiosity.



And you know what? Last year, we had all of that.



All of it.



These three women were the highlight of your days. They helped you learn. They helped you grow. They made you excited about showing up to school every single day.



Here’s to another twenty years of teachers just like that.

Pensive



This is for A Million Memories September Kit.



Journaling Reads:
What are you thinking,

I wonder.

Watching that toy.
What goes through your little mind?
Do you want to reach for it?
Are you curious what it is?
Are you wondering where
the boy who plays with those went?
Do you want to chew it?
I would give so much to be able to

hear your tiny, little mind.



Deeply Madly Loved



This is for A Million Memories September Kit.



Journaling Reads:
Before you came along,

Daddy thought he didn’t care

for babies.

“They don’t really do much for me,” he said.

He likes older boys.

Ones he can wrestle with.
Or throw balls with.

Ones he can talk to.

And then you came along.

And he fell in love.
Deeply, madly in love.

He’s so very confused about

the whole thing.
He doesn’t understand how

it could have happened.

How he could love this little baby

so very much.
That’s how magical you’ve been,

little Nathaniel.
How very loved you are.

Deeply. Madly. Loved.

Daily Photos – August 31 2009



I couldn’t pick one. I love them all.















Almost September.

Catalyst 77 – Teaching For America



Catalyst seventy-seven is: Create art around a time when you had a lot of turmoil and indecision in your life.

Here are my words:

Karen says:
As I mentioned a few weeks ago, here’s another entry about Teach For America. It was, by far, one of the most troubled and tumultuous times in my life. I took this photo from our summer school and added the journaling on it. The journaling is a blog entry I did during the year I taught.

Journaling Reads:
Memory is selective.

There’s a reason we forget things. Human resilience has been tested millions of times in history. Tons of women have told me that if we didn’t forget, no one would have more than one child. Well, I haven’t had any babies yet and can’t tell you what labor pain feels like or how quickly I might forget it. But I do know that I’ve been known to distort the past as things change or as time passes.

The last few weeks have been so difficult that I decided, this time, I want to keep a record so that I can’t fool myself when I choose to look back upon these memories. Think of this as a time capsule. Something for me to lock up and put away, only to be opened when I begin to forget. Something for my friends to show me when I start saying things like, “Oh, it wasn’t that bad.”

The fact is, it is that bad. It’s hard. It’s frustrating. At times, it’s heart-wrenching. It’s infuriating. Sometimes it’s funny. But it’s constantly overwhelming.

When I decided to quit my six-year job and change career paths, I knew that my life wouldn’t be the same. I knew that teaching would eat more of my free time than investment banking ever did. I also knew that I’d feel it was worth it. So I assume the big question now would be: Is it?

Is it worth it?

Honestly? I can’t tell you yet. All I can say so far is that I underestimated how difficult this is. Getting up at the crack of dawn, grading on the train to school, climbing 98 steps eleven times a day, four to six of which includes leading a class of 28. Spending every moment on my feet. Having to think about what I’m saying all the time. Having my incompetence stare me so squarely in the face.

My life has changed alright: I get up when it’s dark, go to school, teach, stay after school to grade, come home when it’s dark, prepare for the next day’s lessons, call parents, eat dinner and crash in bed. Every single day. I dream about my students. I dream about photocopying onto overhead paper. I dream about lizards eating me. I spend my weekends planning for the week. Preparing charts for my room. Writing papers for my graduate classes. Buying prizes for my students. Photocopying. And sleeping.

My only moments of peace come on Sunday mornings where my amazing husband and I go to the local bagel shop at 8:30 and read the New York Times for two hours. Two hours of heaven. Two hours of not thinking about all the things that go wrong in my room. Two hours of not worrying about how the next day’s lessons will go. Two hours of not feeling so incredibly incompetent.

I do love my students. Even the most mischievous ones. I can’t help but care about them. I want to laugh at their ingenuity even when it disrupts my class. But my tolerance and patience has dwindled almost to nothing. It’s gotten so bad that when I see people chewing gum anywhere, I have to work extra hard to suppress the urge to yell, “spit it out!” I fix everyone’s grammar constantly. I can’t stand it when people are being disrespectful at a meeting by having their own side conversation. I have heard every excuse and more as to why homework is not complete. I have listened to parents hollering at their children in front of my eyes. Much to my despair, I have made students cry.

But I have also made them smile. The magic of a student understanding something I’ve taught is immeasurable. Just like the drain when a student refuses to stop calling out loud in class or refuses to stop being disruptive.

So many things happen each day. I always come home with the urge to write, knowing I’m going to want to remember these days.

But I don’t write.

Days pass, I forget. My memory knows I won’t survive it if I keep remembering, so it helps me out. Maybe it’s better that way.

Maybe some things are best forgotten.