Category: Photography

  • Dear Heart, Deer Heart

    Dear Heart, Deer Heart

    I like a bit of mongrel myself,
    whether it’s a man or a dog;

    they’re the best for everyday.

    -George Bernard Shaw

    Dear Mr. Deer Hunting Man,

    This may surprise you if you have preconceived notions about bleeding-heart liberals and animal activists, but I actually have no problem with you hunting deer. The deer population here along the DE/PA/MD border is frankly insane, they can’t possibly find enough food to stay healthy, the Lyme disease problem grows worse every year (we’ve had one dog and two humans in this household fall prey so far, that we know of). And certainly a well-placed shot is far more humane than a fast-moving car.

    I readily acknowledge the fact that hunters truly understand where food comes from, and the sacrifice that goes along with that. I think it’s a healthier relationship with meat than most people have: buying it neatly wrapped in plastic, bearing no resemblance to the clucking, oinking, or doe-eyed creature it originated from.

    I also really, really love the brilliant programs by which hunters can donate venison to local food banks to help feed the homeless and needy in Pennsylvania and Delaware.

    I realize that it’s vitally important to field-dress your kill to bring the temperature of the meat down quickly, and to keep the ick in the digestive bits from breaking open during transport. I imagine that’s no good for the venison.

    And I totally get that you thought you were being nice, tossing ol’ Jimmy the deer heart as a treat. I hear it’s delicious sliced thin and sautéed with onion on a sandwich.

    "Awww, can't I keep it?"

    But unless you’ve got some sort of documentation that this particular deer didn’t have worms, or Lyme, or something else I’m not thinking of, Jimmy’s not allowed to have it. Mr Hunter Man, have you ever tried to take a deer heart from a beagle mix? It’s not easy. Jimmy literally tried to choke the thing down whole rather than give it up.

    I almost died laughing, though. It was nice to see Jimmy act like a dog- normally he just likes to lay on the couch and watch TV- and the absurdity of the whole thing just overtook me. Tears falling down my face. My kids thought I’d really gone round the bend this time.

    When you go to let the dog in you just about never expect to see him holding an enormous heart in his mouth.

    (Do I miss city living? Not a chance.)

    P.S. To every thing there is a season: while I was aware of the big game hunting available- deer, elk, bear, etc- I was surprised by what else you can hunt in PA. Didja know there are seasons for squirrels, woodchucks, starlings, crows (! Not my beloved crows!), English sparrows, coyotes, raccoon, foxes,  beaver, and freaking bobcat? For some reason these small-game kills bother me more; maybe because you don’t use the meat; this is mainly for sport (and in some cases, population control, but I still don’t like it).

    How do you feel about hunting? My opinion has definitely evolved over time.

    What’s the worst thing your pet ever brought in the house?

  • Assignment: Pledge to be nicer

    Assignment: Pledge to be nicer

    Hope this puts a smile on your face! Cass learns how to cross her eyes. An important life skill when you're six.

    I will hold the door for people behind me. I will say “please” and “thank you.” I will smile at strangers. I will compliment people. If I’m not sure whether I should greet someone with a handshake or hug, I will opt for the hug. If I see someone having trouble, I will offer help. I will try to perform at least one Random Act of Kindness a week. I will be grateful. I will not hold grudges. I will always do my best to be humble, empathetic, and honest. I will be mindful and considerate of the people around me. I will be kind to people, animals, and nature. All in all, I promise to be nicer!

    I’ve meant to blog about Melissa over at Operation NICE for a while now. Operation NICE is a project, a blog, a movement that “encourages individuals to be proactively nice.” That’s all. Not asking for donations, your time, your emails, or the sun and stars. Just suggesting that, given the opportunity, it might be nice if you did something nice. For no reason other than it’s the nice thing to do.

    I love this. And I love the fact that Operation NICE is based right here in Philly. (Well, right over there in Philly. Close enough.)

    My resolution a few years back was to be positive. It was partly why I even started this blog, to seek out things to feel good about- the everyday “wayside sacraments.” My default position was always pessimistic and defensive, and I was just tired of being that way. It took me a few months to fully realize that your outlook is entirely defined by your frame of mind, not by external events and factors. That when you let things get you down, you’re letting them get you down. You have a choice. And that when you decide to look at the entire world with unflappability- mind like water– it has a ripple effect. Or, more accurately, an anti-ripple effect. Your refusal to get all worked up about things causes other people to calm down. You realize that things turn out however they’re going to turn out, and getting upset really only affects you.

    Make no mistake. Being positive is hard, hard work at first. People make fun of you.

    Then it becomes a habit. And then it just becomes who you are.

    I like this person much better.

    This year I’m taking the pledge to be proactively nice. Before, I was just refusing to add to the negativity, but now I’m gonna add something positive. It’s going to feel silly at first, I know. I will probably get upset at people not acknowledging how I held the door for them. (I will try not to, but I can foresee this happening.) I’m hoping over time it will become a habit, and then a defining characteristic. That people, when describing me, might use the word… nice.

    I’m pretty sure that’s never happened before.

    Who’s with me? C’mon.

    Pledge to be nicer.

    Always be a little kinder than necessary.
    -James M. Barrie

    Getting money is not all a man’s business:
    to cultivate kindness is a valuable part of the business of life.
    -Samuel Johnson

    Being considerate of others will take your children further in life than any college degree.
    -Marian Wright Edelman

    The best portion of a good man’s life-
    his little, nameless, unremembered acts of kindness and love.
    -William Wordsworth

    I expect to pass through life but once.
    If therefore, there be any kindness I can show,
    or any good thing I can do to any fellow being,
    let me do it now, and not defer or neglect it,
    as I shall not pass this way again.
    -William Penn

  • 2011: Perspective. Resolution.

    2011: Perspective. Resolution.

    One resolution I have made, and try always to keep, is this:

    To rise above the little things.

    John Burroughs

    Yesterday was New Year’s Day, January 1st, the beginning of a new year and the dawn of a new decade.

    I dreamt of my father, who died nearly eight years ago. Eight. God. It was brought on, I imagine, because I asked my kids on New Year’s Eve to remember my Uncle George, my father’s brother, who passed this fall. I asked them to fix him in their memories, so they could tell their cousin Eva, who was born only a few weeks before his death, about him. How pleased he was when she was born.

    Memory is funny, I guess; in my dreamspace it was literally like walking, talking, drinking coffee with my dad again. I guess in a sense I really was; our memories are our reality while we are dreaming. But, my rational, conscious mind kept butting in and reminding me that my dad is gone, and so there was a bit of terror mixed in- duality- I woke up drenched in sweat, and afraid.

    And then so, so freaking sad, as I realized again that he was gone. But for a morning I was able to hear echoes of his voice, smell his shampoo, just remember what it was like to sit next to him. I remembered.

    Later on in the day I realized I’d lost the sound of his voice again. Sigh. Does it ever get any easier?

    Anyway. My point being (yes, I do have a point to make here), just because January 1 is the first day of the year doesn’t mean that everything is shiny and new. It has its highs and lows, just like any other day, just like any other week, month, year, decade.

    The key to happiness, I’ve decided, is knowing that life is cyclical, in being content to ride out the low points until things start looking up, and taking the time to enjoy the sun on your face and the breeze in your hair once you reach the top.


    New Year’s Day is the moment when you get to pause at the pinnacle, hold your breath and feel butterflies in your stomach, look out over the year left behind and the year ahead. It’s a moment of perspective.

    An opportunity to rise above the little things, make big plans, dream lofty dreams, if only just for one day.

    I don’t really have any resolutions for 2011, other than a vague “More Martha, less Roseanne.” I plan to wear heels more, just because I like the clack- clack- clack sound they make on my floors. I bought myself Fiestaware so that I would better enjoy my time in the kitchen. And I’m trying to talk my sister-in-law into a standing once-a-month movie date just to ensure I do something fun every once in a while.

    I plan to feel better about myself. Just in general.

    What I do have is a faded page ripped out of a Real Simple magazine, that’s been pinned to my bulletin board above my desk for years now. Words to live by. They’ve done so much good for me, I thought I’d share with you: to help with perspective in 2011.

    1. Allow yourself the chance to really savor each moment.

    2. Optimism isn’t just a shift in perspective. It’s an act of bravery.

    3. Only you can decide the path worth taking.

    4. Don’t wait for your mood to change; take action despite it.

    5. Approach gift shopping as an opportunity to honor the people you really love.

    6. Rather than search for a single miracle food, strive for a varied and delicious diet.

    7. You can’t grow without pushing your limits.

    8. Stop worrying about getting sick- focus on your health instead.

    9. Don’t believe what you hear. Life is good.

    10. No one knows what the future will bring. Put your energy into now.

    And my own addition: take the time to notice all the little things about the people that you love. Take no one, nothing, for granted.

    Happy New Year, everybody. May this year bring you everything you need.

    Ferris Wheel photos taken @ Morey's Pier, on the boardwalk in Wildwood NJ.