• About
  • Blog
  • Books
  • Photography
  • Contact
Hilary With One L

Hilary With One L

Hilary With One L

Hilary

photography

Let’s See What Develops, Pt. 2

Let’s See What Develops, Pt. 2

I love photography. I love pictures. I love looking at them. I love being in them. I love taking them. However, with the way I’ve been treating my camera, you’d never know it. While I am an avid Instagrammer, I have been neglecting my DSLR.  My camera body is pristine from lack of use.  My Lightroom is laughably outdated.  I need to make a change beyond toting my camera around with me like another member of the family.  I need to examine what it is that I love about photography, how I got here and why I want to keep taking pictures.  Some introspection was in order.

The photography blog, Click It Up a Notch, has a series of photographer interviews that I read voraciously.  The more I read, the more my mind sparked and fired, ideas pinging around faster than I could grab them.  If reading about other photographers created such a response, what would happen if I posed those same questions* to myself?   Over the next few weeks, we’re going to find out.

*photographer interview questions courtesy of Courtney Slazinik of Click It Up a Notch.

What is the best advice you received so far on your photography journey?

photo, photography, manual, olives, snack, nosh

Nikon 50mm | f/5.6 | 1/80 sec | ISO 200

Given my previous work as a stock model, I’ve been fortunate enough to make friends with some very talented photographers.  As I transitioned from one side of the lens to the other, being able to ask questions about lighting, angles, and lenses has been invaluable.  The one piece of information that trumps all, however, has been this:

Manual, manual, manual.

You have to shoot in manual.

No matter how daunting it may seem, the only way to be comfortable and confident behind the lens is to shoot in manual.  When you choose to shoot in other settings, the camera makes the decision for you.  Whatever image appears on the LCD screen is was taken by the camera.  When you shoot manual, when you select the shutter speed, the aperture, and the ISO, you make the decisions. The image that is captured is truly your own.

Shooting in manual always made my stomach roil, especially when I was first starting out.  I didn’t trust myself enough to make the right choices in order to get the best image.  The more opportunities I had to shoot, the more opportunities I had to hone my skills.  In between sessions with clients, I would snap pictures of my kids, my yard, whatever I could, in to test myself.  I already trusted myself when it came to setting up the shot.  I had to develop that same trust in capturing it.  Sometimes I nailed it.   Sometimes, not so much.  I kept at it, though, until it started to become second nature.

I still get butterflied when I shoot in manual, but it’s now because I’m excited about how far I’ve come.

Continue Reading
IN: photography ON: June 3, 2015 TAGS: introspection, photograph, photography, photos, pinterest, projects, series BY: Hilary
SHARE
Continue Reading

Odds and Ends

Odds and Ends

We’ve had a deluge of rain the past few days, which means, we’ve been keeping it close to home.  Keeping it close to home means I’ve been wearing my “cruise director” hat in addition to chef, chauffeur, and concierge.  By the time little heads hit the pillow, it’s all I can do to keep my own eyes open for a little quality time with me, myself, and I.  Of course, rather than be productive, I curl up to the lava like heat of my laptop and surf until I am deliriously in need of sleep.

Continue Reading
IN: ON: June 3, 2015 TAGS: 5 things, books, Odds and Ends, sharing BY: Hilary
SHARE
Continue Reading
photography

Let’s See What Develops

Let’s See What Develops

The past few weeks have found me at my desk, the surface awash in papers, pens, camera lenses, and Apple devices.  The elusive time I’ve been craving to set my work life to rights has materialized and I don’t want to waste it.  In an attempt to make the best use of this gift, I’ve scrapped my previous practice of crafting a labyrinthine to-do list in favor of selecting one task to do all the way through completion. It’s much for challenging than I anticipated.  The payoff, however, is insanely more gratifying.

I’ve chosen about five areas that I want to cultivate: Writing, Family Life, Fitness, Self, and Photography. And yes, I notice that those same areas are the ones I write most about on this blog.  Each day, I’ve chosen one of those areas and spent my time reading, brain-storming, note taking, and creating.

I love photogragphy. I love pictures. I love looking at them. I love being in them. I love taking them. However, with the way I’ve been treating my camera, you’d never know it. While I am an avid Instagrammer, I have been neglecting my DSLR.  My camera body is pristine from lack of use.  My Lightroom is laughably outdated.  I need to make a change beyond toting my camera around with me like another member of the family.  I need to examine what it is that I love about photography, how I got here and why I want to keep taking pictures.  Some introspection was in order.

The photography blog, Click It Up a Notch, has a series of photographer interviews that I read voraciously.  The more I read, the more my mind sparked and fired, ideas pinging around faster than I could grab them.  If reading about other photographers created such a response, what would happen if I posed those same questions* to myself?   Over the next few weeks, we’re going to find out.

*photographer interview questions courtesy of Courtney Slazinik of Click It Up a Notch.

Tell us a little about yourself and your photography journey.

photography, photographer, interview, nikon, portrait, selfie

September 2010: Client’s almost ready, but first, let me take a selfie.

I have been collecting photographs, taking pictures and making albums for longer than I can remember. I am historian of sorts, a keeper of memories. Chances are, if you and I have shared an experience, I’ve probably got a picture of it.

In my early twenties, I began working for a modeling agency in Richmond. I worked with several photographers doing stock imagery before eventually working as booking agent and wrangler. When I was a young(er) mom with two under two threading around my ankles, I became friends with Kendall.  Kendall had two under two as well. Kendall also had the most stunning photographs of her kids, her family, her life dotting her walls.  She had taken all of those pictures.  Kendall told me how she studied photography in college (Me: you can do that?), and how when a professor criticized her technique, she told him that she didn’t care. She just wanted to be able to take beautiful pictures of her kids — her marriage and firstborn inevitable, like trips to the grocery store and taxes.

Kendall got tapped to shoot a wedding for a friend and she asked me to go with her to be her second.  I was both honored and petrified.  We spent the week-end in the Outer Banks, capturing everything from the rehearsal dinner and the bridal party prep to the ceremony and send off. It. Was. Amazing. Kendall and I were a good team. We formed a photography company and got to work.  Several years, several moves and several kids later, our company has dissolved, but I’m still shooting.   I wrangle child models (mostly my own kids) for other photographers. I pick up a few jobs where I’m sitting under the lights.  I book clients looking to capture toothless grins of babies, the sparkle  of happily ever after that comes with a recent engagement, the slice of life shots that will be sent out at holiday time for family and friends to enjoy. I snap photos of my kids, of my husband, of myself.

Photography can be a hobby, a passion, a career.  Photography can be so many things.  For me, photography is storytelling through images.

I have lots of stories to tell.

Continue Reading
IN: photography ON: June 1, 2015 TAGS: honesty, introspection, photograph, photography, photos, pinterest, projects, series, sharing BY: Hilary
SHARE
Continue Reading
recipes

Recipe Friday: Ice Cream Sandwiches

Recipe Friday: Ice Cream Sandwiches

It really doesn’t get much easier than this.  Sadly, most of the end product was consumed before I could snap some photos. What you see here are stock images found on Pinterest. The spirit is the same!

I’m really going all in this summer, trying to max out on activities and fun times with the girls.  I’m marvelling at how quickly they are growing up and I want to be really present to enjoy these times.  I haven’t really enjoyed the girls as much as want to, given all the challegnes that I’ve been facing trying to recouperate. There’s been a lot of me telling them “No” and “I can’t do that” or “You have to wait for someone else”.  Not much fun when what they really want is to spend time with me.

Slowly, slowly, I’m rectificying that.  Last week-end, I took C and V with me to the Home Depot.  We loaded up on herbs, marigolds, begonias and potted plants.  Pinterest said all you need is some herbs and a dream to make your backyard garden a reality.  I bought into it 100%.  We spent the bulk of Sunday afternoon elbow deep in potting soil and watering cans.  I think I enjoyed it more than the girls did.

Memorial Day, the girls and I christened the grill for the 2015 year, firing up hamburgers, hot dogs and chicken breasts. We sat outside and had a lovely time around the picnic table and under the umbrella.  I passed around some cans of Coke and you’d have thought they’d each received a golden ticket. I mean, what’s a cook-out without some Coca-Cola, right?

While I do have a more tricks up my sleeve to keep us entertained this summer, I’m dangerously close to blowing my wad in the next few days.  Yesterday, I made a grocery list, asking the girls what kind of sweet treats they’d like to have. Ice cream sanwiches were top of the list.  Ahh, the ice cream sandwich, a true summer time staple, only surpassed by the ice cream sanwich made with chocolate chip cookies.  We’re a big fan of those.  The girls put their requests in and off I went to the store.

My hands were on the box of 6 Good Humor Chocolate Chip cookie sandwiches when it occurred to me, this is so easy. I could make these myself.  So, that’s what I decided to do.  The box went back into the depths of the frozen food department. I navigated my way around the aisles, grabbing a gallon of Breyer’s Homestyle Vanilla and a package of Break and Bake Toll House cookies.  At home, I turned on the oven, dropped the cookies on the sheet and let them bake.  Once they were  done, I let them cool while the ice cream softened on the counter.

I ended up with a dozen good sized cookies, upon which I dolloped a healthy scoop of softened ice cream and then topped with another cookie.  All told, I finished with six CD sized ice cream sandwiches, which I slid into the freezer to harden.  Could I have rolled them in sprinkles or chocolate chips or some other sugar based confection? Probably.  Did I? Nope.  First time out of the gate, I went for simplicity. We’ve got the whole summer ahead of us; plenty of time to coat ourselves (and the floor) with a rainbow of sugary crystals. Despite the rather plain appearance, the reaction to this dessert was anything but.  Who doesn’t love an ice cream sandwich? And an ice cream sandwich made by Mom?! #winning !

What’s your favorite summer time ice cream treat? Tell me all about it in the comments!

Happy Friday, y’all!

pinterest, cookies, cooking, baking, summer, treats

Yum, yum, yum!

Chocoloate Chip Cookie Ice Cream Sandwiches

recipe via Cooking on the Side with some edits by Hilary with One L

Ingredients

1. 1 package of 12 break and bake (or slice and bake) cookies

2. 1 pint of vanilla (or your favorite) ice cream

3. Sprinkles, chocolate chips, nuts or other toppings (optional)

Directions

1. Bake the cookies according to the directions on the package. Allow cookies to cool.

2. While cookies are cooling, allow ice cream to soften, no more than 5 minutes.

3. Divide the cookies into pairs.

4. Lay one cookie on a flat, clean surface, bottom side up. Place a small, round scoop of ice cream on the center of the cookie. Close the sandwich with a second cookie, gently pressing down so that the ice cream spreads to meet the edges of the cookies evenly.

5. Carefully roll the sides of the sandwich in your decorations (gently press them into the ice cream to help them stay put) and immediately transfer the sandwich to your tray in the freezer.

Enjoy!

Continue Reading
IN: recipes ON: May 27, 2015 TAGS: arts and craps, baking, cooking, food, om nom nom, pinterest, recipes BY: Hilary
SHARE
Continue Reading
projects & DIY

Pinned It, Did it: Teacher Gifts

Pinned It, Did it: Teacher Gifts

Memorial Day has come and gone, which means we are officially into summer.  I can hardly believe it!  I distinctly remember slogging through January, dreaming of sweaty glasses of lemonade and prime real estate at the pool, while I was shoveling mounds and mounds of snow.  June is all but here, peeking it’s head around the last vestiges of May.  Here we are — summer, summer, summertime.

The beginning of summer means the end of school. This year was V’s first year of preschool and it was  stellar year for her.  She thoroughly enjoyed her two-day-two program.  In addition to making friends, learning her numbers and color, and just being an all around superstar on the playground, V was a stand-out student with her teachers.  I wanted to thank them for making V’s year such a success. I dug through my craft board on Pinterest and found this super cute and super easy teacher appreciation gift.

I have to Ad-Mitt! You’re a Sweet Teacher via Eighteen25.com

DIY, pinterest, crafts, teacher gift, teacher appreciation, easy

I have to Ad-Mitt, this is a super fun craft to create!

You’ll need a cute oven mitt, a spatula, and a bag of cookie mix for each of the intended recipients.

DIY, Pinterest, craft, teacher appreciation, teacher gift, crafts, easy

Assemble your items

 

Tuck the cookie mix and the spatula into the oven mitt and set aside.

DIY, pinterest, crafts, teacher gift, teacher appreciation, easy

It practically makes itself!

Print out the template found on eighteen25.com, attach it to some cardstock and punch a hole in the top.  Wrap some nice grosgrain ribbon around the mitt and through the hole of the cardstock.

FullSizeRender-2

Tie it with a bow and you’re all done!

FullSizeRender-4

The original set of mitts I made were blue and red gingham mitts with black spatulas and chocolate chip cookie mix.  I like affixing the note to some cardstock for a little extra punch, but it’s not required.  Also, if cookies aren’t your jam, you could substitute it for any other type of packaged baked good.  You can make this jazzy or as simple.  Put your own signature on it and make it was awesome as you like.  Whatever you choose to do, no doubt, it’ll be pretty sweet!

What kind of easy DIY gift ideas have you tried? Share with me in the comments!

 

 

Continue Reading
IN: projects & DIY ON: May 27, 2015 TAGS: arts and craps, crafts, DIY, pinterest, projects, summer BY: Hilary
SHARE
Continue Reading
projects & DIY

DIY Monday: The Swimsuit Project

DIY Monday: The Swimsuit Project

A few days ago, I posted a triptych photo of V chronicling how much she’s grown from year to year.  In each photo, she wears an old J.Crew shirt of mine.  In each photo, the shirt gets a little shorter on her legs and on her arms.  V is my third and last little biscuit, but she is not the first to participate in this photo study of growth and development. Each of my girls has their own unique outfit in which to dress up every year on their respective birthdays.  For C, it’s a Grecian dress I bought on a whim while traveling abroad.  For M, it’s a Lands End bathing suit that I had in my closet when I first came across this project.

In August of 2006, M was turning a year old.  During her first year, I turned to a number of resources to help me navigate the first year of parenthood: family, friends, books, magazines — I was all over it, making sure that she was hitting her milestones, that she was eating from all of the food groups, and that she was engaged in activities to stimulate growth and development — Gymboree Play and Music! Kindermusik! Stroller Strides! My mother gifted me with a subscription to Parents Magazine as part of my “Welcome to Motherhood” starter pack.  In the last issue before my subscription ran out, I came across an article entitled “The Swimsuit Project”.  In it, author Maria Heck describes how prior to her becoming a mother, she came across a photo essay in Life Magazine.  The photo essay depicted a young woman whose mother had posed her in the same bathing suit each year on her birthday.  Heck was duly impressed and promised herself that whenever she had a daughter, she would duplicate the project.  When her daughter was 4 months old, Heck slipped Madeline into a floral bathing suit, complete with bra cups, that had belonged to Heck’s mother.  Every year on Madeline’s birthday, Heck snapped a picture. She did this for 15 years, stopping when the suit fit her daughter better than it had ever fit her own mother.

At that point in time, Heck decided that, “the chronicle is complete. She has gone from baby to young woman. If anything proves that your child grows up in the blink of an eye, it’s seeing these pictures all together and realizing that the first one was only a heartbeat away from the last.”

swimsuit project, DIY, children, activities, photography, patience

The Original Project via Parents Magazine, August 2006

The article in Parents was Heck’s photo essay of the very project that caught her eye. Like Heck, I was struck by the simplicity of the project, the patience required, and the unique approach in cataloging a child’s growth and development.  I decided that I was going to do this project with, and for, M. We started that night, with my Lands End Tunic Bathing Suit. When C was born, we had hung up the bathing suit from M’s two year photo shoot and I began thinking about what C could wear when it was her turn.  A dress that I knew I would never again wear, but was loathe to part with became her outfit.  For V, a Peter Pan Collared shirt from J.Crew that I could not make work, despite my best efforts.

swimsuit project, diy, photography

M at age 1 through 9

 

swimsuit project, photography, DIY, pinterest

C at ages 1 through 7

 

swimsuit project, photography, DIY, pinterest

V, ages 1-3

I happily relinquish those items to my girls, though, because as time goes by and the photos begin to grow in number, I am overwhelmed at how much my little ladybugs have grown and changed.  Certainly, I had the fortune of seeing this project while my first born child was still young, but I think it’s one that is never too late to start.  A similar take on this project is snapping a pic of your little person in your wedding gown (or menswear equivalent) and then (if you can manage it) bringing that photo out when they get engaged or married.  Use it for the save the date or something.

My advice? Don’t overthink it.  Choose something meaningful to you and snap a photo of it.  Remember to do it around the same time every year. Be patient. Before you know it, you’ll have captured something so mind-blowing and precious, you’ll be patting yourself on the back for reading this post!

If you take on this project, what item would you choose for your little person to wear? Tell me about it in the comments!

 

 

 

 

 

 

Continue Reading
IN: projects & DIY ON: May 25, 2015 TAGS: arts and craps, birthday, crafts, DIY, photography, pinterest, projects, reminiscing, sharing BY: Hilary
SHARE
Continue Reading
hair

So What Had Happened Was. . .

So What Had Happened Was. . .

Well this sucks. . .

There’s really not much more to be said about it than that.  I’ve been out of pocket for about five days, trying to get myself, the kids, the household back on track after an unexpected trip (and prolonged stay) at the hospital.  Truth be told, I don’t like drawing attention to myself, but when I found out that there wasn’t going to be an quick in and out trip to the doctor, I decided to post a screen shot of my hospital bed to give folks a heads up.

So here’s what had happened. . .

You all know that I’ve been doing my best to lay low after this last tendon re-tensioning surgery. I’ve watched so much tv. I’ve surfed every corner of the Internet. I’ve sat around with my leg propped on pillows and let life continue on around me, a human rock letting the river of everyday rush and tumble over and across me. It’s been a challenge, to go from 60 mph to about 10 mph, but I keep telling myself, “If you do this, you’ll heal better, faster, stronger. Suck it up. Suck it up.” So I’ve been doing it.

Last Thursday, I finished the last set of 20 deep knee bends I’m supposed to do 5 times a day.  This is what my workout regimen has become — deep knee bends.  When I was done, I sat down to wrap my ankle in an ace bandage.  Things felt a little warm to the touch and when I finished with the wrap, I noticed that my hand smelled a little funky.  Chalking it up to sweaty feet, I got ready for bed and forgot about it. Friday, I kept noticing that things were a little tender on my ankle and that the smell was not necessarily coming from my feet but from the surgery site.  Have I grossed you out completely? Because of the angle of the incision, I couldn’t really see anything. I tried, unsuccssfully, to snap a few pictures with my phone.  I ended up waiting for the Hubs to come home that evening. I said, “Um, I need you to take a look at something,” which, if you’re ever asked that, usually doesn’t bode well.  Ever the poker face, the Hubs got down, took a look and said, “Yeah, that doesn’t look right.”

Subconcsiouly, I knew something was wrong, but I was in denial.  I called a good friend of mine who is a wound nurse, sent her some photos and was not surprised when she said I needed to call my doctor.  Let me set the scene for you. It’s Friday afternoon at 5:30.  I had planned to have a little quality time with the Hubs, had been looking forward to it all week. I’d laid out a nice little spread:

wine, cheese, fruit, salami, snacks,

Enjoying a little wine and goodies with my best guy. . .at least I was planning to. .

My doctor is based out of Baltimore. His office closes at 4:30. Nothing good is going to come of me calling, but I do.  The doctor on call is very genial, very concerned. He gives me his personal cell number, instructing me to take photos and send them along.  After a series of exchanges and a few harried calls, he tells me not to eat anything else and asks me how soon I can get to the ER. In Baltimore.

[insert expletives of your choosing here]

By now, it’s approaching 7pm. The kids are zoned out in front of the TV. My wine and crackers are an afterthought.  The doctor’s text message — “Don’t eat anything else. We’ll prep the OR just in case, but get to the ER as soon as you can. Tell them I’m expecting you and if you have to wait more than 2 minutes, we’ll fire everyone who stands in the way.”

Well, damn.

I don’t know if I should be impressed with this level of patient care or worried that something is seriously wrong that requires this kind of bad-assery. We get my mom to the house, throw some clothes in a bag and hit the road. It’s now 8pm.

Traffic on the 95N corridor at 8pm on a Friday is fuster-cluck. We make it to Baltimore by 11:30 and I’m in triage by 11:45.  No one got fired.

A new doc comes in, a self-proclaimed minion of my doc.  She’s young, whip-smart and the type of person I’d like to be friends with under completely different circumstances.  She’s got my doc on the speakerphone, running down everything she sees, everything I’ve told her.  She’s snapping photos, texting dimensions and referring to my doc as Batman because 1) he never sleeps and 2) he’s just that awesome.

I’ll spare you the details of what went down in the ER.  Suffice it to say, I didn’t have to go to the OR (hallelujah), though I would have much preferred being knocked out than being stuck like a pincushion.  Lidocaine is no friend of mine; the treatment was worse than the cure.

By 4am, I was patched up and wheeled to a room.  The Hubs was almost delirious from lack of sleep. Despite the morphine, lidocaine, and adrenaline, I could have run laps up and down the unit.  Awww, running laps. . .how I miss it. A parade of nurses came in to check vitals, hook me up to IVs, assess this, that, and then some before leaving us to contemplate all of what happened.

What had happened? A post-surgical infection — not uncommon — has started percolating at the distal end of my surgery site.  It wasn’t because of something I did or because of something I didn’t do. It just happens.  Unfortunately, it happened to me.  Fortunately, we caught it before it blossomed into something really nasty.

By now, it’s Saturday morning around 8am. My surgeon comes in, along with the doc on call and the ER doc.  more assessments. More poking, prodding, and palpating.  After all the ministrations, we were left with some instructions to just “hang tight” while they ran cultures to figure out what exactly they were dealing with.

hosptial, recovery, tendon surgery, surgery, IV

Well this sucks. . .

I was more than ready to go home, figuring they’d done everything but hand me some antibiotics.  However, that wasn’t going to happen. They had to know what exactly they found in order to know how best to treat it. Okay, I can understand that.  I’ve had enough anatomy, physiology, and biology to know it takes time to grow cultures.  My doc says, I should be home on Monday.  Not ideal, but manageable.  He talks some more before concluding that Tuesday will probably be the earliest that I can leave.  Wait a tick, he just added a day.  He says, “I’d rather add more days, then let you go early.  Then I look like a hero.  If I say you can go early and then it turns out we have to keep you, then I like a doofus”. His words, exactly.

So, I hunker down  and wait. And wait. And wait.  It is the absolute worst. I try to think of all the silver linings that I can:

  • I’m getting the best medical care.
  • The kids are taken care of.
  • The Hubs is with me.
  • I’ve got great docs.
  • We caught it early.

It’s a small consolation, but I’m really trying to stay positive.  Sunday comes around, with another parade of nurses and doctors.  The information is the same: “We’re still waiting on the cultures to come back from the lab.”  More waiting, more hospital food.  Monday morning. No news.  Monday afternoon, no news. Monday evening and a new doctor, this one the head of infectious diseases.  Great. He says what they know it’s not.  He tells me what they think it is, but he can’t know for sure because, guess what? “We’re still waiting on cultures to come back from the lab. ” at which point my demeanor changes considerably.

My face when the docs came in again to tell me the cultures were still not back from the lab.

I start peppering this doc with information and questions based on everything that I’ve heard so far and everything that I know about anatomy, systemic infections, and bacteria infections, which is considerable. I spoke clearly, concisely, with my words dressed in displeasure, dissatisfaction and impatience.  The Hubs was sitting in a chair working on his computer just letting me skewer the doc, despite my looking over at him like, “C’mon, Tito! Back me up, here!”  No matter.  I handled it just fine and let Dr. Infection simply repeat that we’re waiting on the cultures.  I should have told him not to come back in unless he had cultures in hand.

Tuesday morning. 7am. The doc on call came in and guess what he said? Yup. Not back yet. I ask if the lab is actually in the building or if they’ve outsourced it.  He doesn’t know, he just knows there’s a lab in the hospital because he’s been in it. How reassuring.  I ask how, with no labs back,  Dr. Infection could tell me what he thinks and what he knows about my situation.  Doc on call says, “Well, it’s like trying to determine if this thing is Asian or Caucasian.  We know it’s Asian, but we need to figure out if it’s Japanese, Chinese, Cambodia, or Filipino.” Then he apologizes for that terrible analogy.  Since he’s feeling contrite, I hit him with the fact that I missed V’s birthday yesterday, and that I’ve got two other kids at home that need my attention.  Nothing like a little guilt to grease the wheels of the culture lab.

Tuesday morning. 11am.  word on the street is that the cultures are back, but not yet in the computer.  I’m seriously about to disconnect myself from the IV and run the daggone samples myself.  Tuesday afternoon. Dr. Infection come up with some information. They’ve figured it out. They can write a scrip instead of running a picc line (excuse me? that was under consideration?). I have never moved more purposefully in my life. I started folding up my stuff, packing my bag. Hell, I even made the hospital bed and folded the extra blankets.  I was so done and ready to bail.

By 4:30, I was being wheeled down to the lobby.  I felt like a mole, coming out into the sun for the first time in five days.

So here we are. Trying to put things to rights after having been away from the helm. I’m beyond grateful for my parents, my friends, my girls, and my husband for all of their help and support. I’m so thankful for everyone who has checked in on me, who has offered to help in some way.  Truly, just checking in has been the biggest balm in this entire situation.  I’m thankful that my leg is still attached, that I’ve got the right combo of medical intervention to keep it that way. I’m back to taking it slow.  Dialing it down even more from 10mph. I’m at like 7mph, maybe even 5!  Not ideal, but like everything else, you’ve got to put in the work to see the results.   In this case, the work is actually refraining from work.  Funny how that shakes out.

 

Continue Reading
IN: hair ON: May 22, 2015 TAGS: life, summer, surgery, venting, writing BY: Hilary
SHARE
Continue Reading
Previous 1 2 3 4 5 6 … 98 Next

Hilary With One L

© 2015 Hilary Grant Dixon.