Monday, December 28, 2009

Life's Five: Entry 19


Live. Hubs and I watched It's a Wonderful Life (IAWL) last night for the first time in years. Who doesn't love that movie? Its theme never grows tired for me: the hopes and dreams we THINK we have for our lives may not be the ones we're really MEANT to have, but we have to pay attention to WHAT WE ALREADY HAVE to grasp that. 

See, we set up these big ideas in our heads, just like George Bailey did, of what we are going to do with our lives, where we're going to go, how famous we'll be or how much money we'll make. These grand ideas (or delusions) never really allow us to BE HERE in the moment. We're always THERE thinking about how we're going to get it, become it, make it, taste it, buy it, decorate it, see it, slay it, etc. When we're THERE we don't sincerely respect and appreciate all that we have RIGHT NOW...before us...for what it is...in all its glory. And that attitude assures us that we will NEVER GET THERE. Why? Because tomorrow is made up of everything you put into today. If you plant a disrespectful, unappreciative seed today by looking at the present as a means to an end, you will only reap the same kind of harvest tomorrow. Plant seeds of joy, contentment, and gratitude instead. Because it is from those things, my friends, that dreams are made.

"Most people are prisoners, thinking only about the future of living in the past. They are not in the present, and the present is where everything begins." Carlos Santana

Laugh.  Dave Barry's Year in Review: 2009

Learn. CAUTION: Picking up balls of wadded-up wrapping paper can be hazardous to your health. After spending three hours in the emergency room yesterday thinking I had a kidney stone, when I was really having horrendous back spasms that made labor seem like a paper cut, I have decided I should start working out a bit more. Well...more than once every quarter. On Saturday after Christmas, while simply bending over to clean up wrapping paper weighing the same as, oh, say, an air bubble, I tweaked something, I guess. So, after my back is all healed up, it's back to the gym for me, soon after which I hope to be lifting paper towel rolls and cans of beans with ease...and without an ambulance.

Like. I like it when you give a Christmas present and the recipient really likes it. And you know they really like it because they put it on immediately, or better still, they put it to use when you're not even looking. That happened this year with this cake pan and its 13-year-old-pastry-chef-in-the-making-recipient. I really like that cake pan. It makes these cute, little, miniature three-tiered cakes. I showed great restraint by not buying one for myself. Maybe my little pastry chef friend will read this blog and bring me one of the cakes instead...

Love. I love business peeps who give back to their communities. It's really the way it should be. Just like IAWL's George Bailey and his old Building & Loan, my money is in your house, and your money helped grow my business, and really we're all in this thing together, right? So let's keep the circle in motion by GIVING.

That's exactly what my talented friend, Kristen Kalp, of Essential Imagery in Wayne, PA is doing. A Main Line Philadelphia Children's Photographer, Kristen started a project called GIVING IS AWESOME in 2008 that gave back to her community by offering free heirloom photography to a needy family. Her gesture set off a domino effect, leading to hundreds of photographers joining in the effort across the country and the WORLD! This year, Kalp and her photographer friends are repeating the sounding joy and even more folks are jumping on board.

You still have a chance to nominate a deserving family for Kristen's prize (deadline is Dec 31 for her) if your nominated family lives in her area, but if not, you can go to GIVING IS AWESOME's website and find a photog that makes geographic sense for you/your nominated family.

To read more about the project, check out this feature written by Cheryl Allison of Main Line Media News. You can also view Kristen's beautiful work on her website, essentialimagery.com.

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