A few days of rain dampened the landscape. A few leaves have yet to fall. The beautiful game shined under surly skies as the kids took sides and re-enacted a scene being played the world over. Nearby, emerging friendships snuggled up to each other.
this photoblog is an exploration of boundaries, borders, transitions, transgressions, and other rudiments through a lens of pixels, pixilated nostalgia, moments in time, images-both in and out of context, other optics and a few apparitions.
11.14.2009
11.09.2009
...so the kids have a dog
Saturday we took the kids to meet some dogs in need of adoption, and we left with one. It wasn't supposed to happen that way, but it did. Meet Simba, our eight-week old German Shepard mix.
The Lost Dog Rescue Foundation brought in dozens of dogs that needed adoption. I told the kids that we were going to meet some dogs, but not to expect much more. And then we saw this very mellow, mild-mannered, tawny fur ball. And after filling out the adoption paperwork and a lengthy interview, we were told he was ours.
We are using the crate method to housebreak him, and after forty-eight hours the progress is evident. He is a great fit for our family, and already making amazing strides in the potty-training arena.
His favorite toy is a tennis ball. When he is outside he loves to walk around with large brown maple leaves in his mouth.
11.02.2009
...la edad entre frios
Another source of escape from the heat were stories my parents told about the days when my father was stationed at Fort Richardson, Alaska. My mother always shivered as she recounted the tale, "In Winter it was below zero and when your father would go outside to take the trash out...he would go out without a jacket, just pants and a t-shirt." My father would smile, "It wasn't that cold." I would smile back at him. My mother would rub her arms trying to erase the imaginary goosebumps, and shake her head.
I also recall the cool touch of marble, and the stones ability mock the island's climate. The photograph above is of a font from a Spanish Colonial church in Puerto Rico. During a restoration decades ago, the workers were poised to throw it away, so my grandmother rescued it. Now it rests in my parent's backyard, a birdbath with a storied past, and still cool to the touch.
These days, my father is not so fond of the cold. He shrouds himself in layers during the crisp days of Autumn. The layers insulate him, and perhaps provide him with a false sense of security. He should take better care of himself, and he knows it. The days of facing sub-zero temperatures in a t-shirt are long past, but those moments of defiance live on. He shrugs off signs and symptoms of physiological frailties. He smiles at me. I smile back in order to conceal my worry. My mother rubs her arms trying to erase the imaginary goosebumps, and shakes her head.
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