FUNBOOTH. The perfect alternative to traditional family pictures.

I get it.  Getting family pictures can be super stressful.  Finding the right clothes.  Getting everyone ready.  Finding a location.  Getting there on time.  Making sure the kids don’t still have ketchup on their face.  Trying to act calm and happy while your kids are being terrors.  
I get it.  Trust me.  I do.  
But.  Family pictures are SO important.  So so important.  One of those things you’ll always be glad you have and never regret that you did.
I also realize sometimes the stress is too much.  Too overwhelming.  And you have a kid that simply will NOT cooperate during family pictures.  So you just never get them done.  Even though you want to.
Which is why I came up with Funbooth sessions.

They’re fun.  They’re FAST.  They’re easy.  And they work for kids with all different types of personalities.
The point is to be casual.  Crazy.  Fun.  Like a photobooth.  
Low stress.  No weather elements.  Sessions only take about 25 minutes.  And you end up with a bunch of photographs with your family, your kids, and their personalities.
I’m doing a Funbooth sale during the month of April.  Book a funbooth shoot in April for only $150 (normally $225).  That includes the session fee as well as a disc with about 50 images in color AND black and white and a print release to make whatever prints you want.
Here are some samples of a session I did recently.

And here are a few I did with my own little family.  We did these on a whim on a Sunday afternoon.  We just wore the clothes we already had on.  Simple.  Easy.  These are my favorite sessions to do with my own kids.  The pictures I am in were taken by my husband.  I know he’ll want proper photo credit.  🙂

Here’s how I displayed them in my own home.  This is the first thing people see when people walk into my house.  And people LOVE IT!!  So do I.

Maybe I should have moved the vacuum.  Oh well.  Not taking it again.  🙂
So if you’ve been feeling guilty (or better yet, excited) about getting family pictures but haven’t done them for awhile, this is a great option.
Or, if you get family pictures regularly (GOOD FOR YOU) this may be a good alternative to change things up a little bit.
To book a Funbooth session, e-mail me at [email protected]
Sale runs until April 30th, 2014!

To Give or Not To Give money to the homeless. That’s not really the question.

A few month’s ago we celebrated my brother’s 40th birthday.  I never in a million years thought we would celebrate that day.  I didn’t think he’d be alive.

My brother is an alcoholic and an addict.  He has a long history of drug and, more specifically, alcohol abuse.  And just for the record, I have his permission to talk about this stuff.

He spent a few different periods of his life living on the streets of Salt Lake City.  He was homeless.  He was making choices that lead to this situation.  We, his family, couldn’t force him to choose otherwise.  And because of those choices, he was not allowed to live with any of us.  It was awful.  For everyone involved.  I won’t go into details right now because that’s not really the point for writing this.

He spent some of the time sleeping at the Road Home.  Some of the time he slept on people’s couches.  “Friends”, I guess.  Sometimes he was at the VOA (Volunteers of America).  Other times he slept in fields, the mountains, the side of the road.  Wherever he passed out sometimes.

 

And during many of those periods, he panhandled for money.  At grocery stores, on the streets, at trax, in parking lots.

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 Our family got pretty good at not giving him money.  Because we knew exactly what he’d use it for. And because we were doing all that “tough love” stuff in hopes it would compel him to make better life choices.  That whole tough love thing was NOT easy for our family.  It was horrific, really.

So when he asked for money on the streets, he was the stereotypical person who begged for money, then turned right around and used that money to buy drugs and alcohol.  He WAS the person people don’t want to give money to because they assume you’ll use it to drink or get high.

But.  He also used that money to eat.  And buy socks.  And a coat.  And a backpack to hold his few meager belongings.  And other seemingly small things.  But those things are what kept him alive.  Other people kept my brother alive when we couldn’t.  We didn’t even know if keeping him alive was the right goal.  Sounds awful to even say that, but it’s the truth.  Anyone who has dealt with addiction on a personal level knows exactly what I’m talking about.  It’s one of the most hopeless situations a person and family can be in.

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During one of our many conversations about my brother’s life on the streets, he said to me “The worst part about asking people for money is they acted like you didn’t even exist.  They acted like they couldn’t even hear you.  And they looked right past you.  Like I wasn’t even there.  That was the worst part.  It wasn’t about them giving me money or not.  It was about them treating me like a worthless piece of shit.”  (There may or may not have been some more expletives in that statement that I chose to leave out.)

 

I thought a lot about that.  And started feeling pretty bad because I knew I was guilty of that very thing. Sometimes acting like those people asking for money weren’t even there.  Walking right past them without looking at them.  Hurrying past them and ignoring they’d even said anything to me.  It was awkward for me sometimes.  To deal with those people.  To not give them money because I assumed I knew what they’d use it for.  And I didn’t want to contribute to their “problem”.  (Truth is, they’ll find the money somewhere, whether you give it to them or not–addicts are very resourceful when they have to be)

And then it struck me.  It’s NOT about whether I give them money or not.  Give them money, don’t give them money.  I’m not saying one is right and one is wrong.  But I could (and should) ALWAYS treat them like a human being.  A person with a soul whose worth is as great as mine.  Instead of asking myself, “should I give them money?” I ask myself “how should I treat this person?”

My brother was hit by a car after stumbling into the road while drunk.  He was life-flighted (not his first time on a life-flight) and in the ICU for 3 weeks, the hospital for 5 weeks.  (You can read the blog we kept while he was in the hospital right here).  He has now been sober for roughly 2 years.  After nearly 20 years of hard core alcohol and drug abuse, he is sober (for various reasons, including a traumatic brain injury).  And people who gave him money, and treated him like a soul of worth, and took care of him at the VOA and Salvation Army, and sheltered him at the Road Home helped keep him alive.

His life is not all sunshine and roses even now that he’s sober.  20 years of uncontrollable alcohol abuse doesn’t just disappear.  And he can still be a complete pain in the ass.  But he’s alive.  And our family wasn’t the only ones who helped keep him alive (though we fought tooth and nail to do that for him).

And I am grateful for that.  Because he’s my brother.  And he’s my parents son.  And he has a good heart.  And he’s taught me more about human compassion and being non-judgmental, and seeing the value and worth in every human soul, than any other person on this earth.

So now when I see someone asking for money on the side of the road, or at a stoplight, or the freeway offramp, or by temple square downtown I always try to remember that is someone’s brother, sister, mother, father, aunt, uncle, grandma, niece, nephew, son, or daughter.  Someone cares about that person.  Someone’s world is shattered because of the choices that person made.  Someone, somewhere, loves that person and wishes with all their heart that person wasn’t out begging for money.  And God loves that person JUST AS MUCH as he loves me.

 

“I am confident because I believe that I am a child of God.  I am humble because I believe that everyone else is too.”  Glennon Doyle Melton

 

And so I try to say hello to them.  And I make eye contact.  And I tell them I hope they have a good day.  And sometimes I give them money.  And sometimes I don’t.  But I always try to make them feel like I care they exist in this world.  I SEE them.  And I HEAR them.

I am grateful for the people who did that for my brother.  Grateful for people who reached out to him.  Who showed him compassion.  Who didn’t judge him.  And for the people who gave him money.  I’m grateful for them too.

It’s not about giving or not giving money.  It’s about seeing every human being the way God sees them.  And treating them accordingly.

 

{Side note.  I am FULLY aware that some panhandlers do it as a “business”.  And some panhandlers are rude and entitled and not very kind people.  There is a WIDE variety of reasons people are asking for money on the street.  I hope we can all be sensitive to those many and varied reasons.  And not lump them all into one pool of people.  And be grateful we’re not the ones asking for the money.  And I want to emphasize I’m not professing whether or not people should give money.  More than anything, I wrote this post for my kids.  To help show them the need for human compassion and love.  I am in NO WAY trying to start a debate on giving money to panhandlers.  Just so we’re clear on that before people light me up in the comment section}

Chicken Pesto Pizza–this is ridiculously good. And easy!!

I always laugh when I post recipes on here.  I am not particularly good at cooking.  And I find little or no joy in cooking.  So it’s a little ironic I post recipes.  And I in no way intend for this to be a recipe/food blog.  But it is a huge priority for our family to eat dinner together every night.  So I cook at least something almost every evening.  We don’t eat out much.

It is because of this dislike for cooking that when I find a GREAT and EASY recipe (and moderately healthy), I feel compelled to share it.  For the rest of you out there who love food like me, but don’t necessarily love spending hours in the kitchen only to listen to my kids comment on how disgusting the food is I just cooked.  Maybe that’s just my kids.

I’d rather hire someone to come cook dinner for us than hire someone to clean my house.

Anyway, this is a recipe I adapted from one I originally saw on Becky Higgins (the creator of Project Life) instagram feed.

This is SO fast and easy.  And was seriously REALLY good.  We ate it two nights in a row we liked it so much.

I bought all of the ingredients for this at Costco.

CHICKEN PESTO PIZZA

1 package of Stonefire mini NAAN flatbread (from Costco)
       {The Flatbread is in the refrigerated section by the specialty cheese- close to where the Pesto will        be as well}
Fresh spinach
Mozzarella cheese (get Fresh mozz and grade it yourself–it melts better than already shredded cheese)
    mushrooms
grilled chicken (I just grilled some chicken with a little garlic salt and montreal chicken seasoning on                              my indoor pan that is like a grill.  Or you can grill it on a bbq.  Or cook it however you want)
Basil Pesto sauce (also from Costco)

Put the flatbread on a pizza stone if you have one, or a cookie sheet should work fine too.  Spread some Basil Pesto sauce on top.  Layer with fresh spinach.  Slice up the grilled chicken and put that on top of the spinach.  Then add fresh mushrooms (if you like them).  You could also add olives.  Sprinkle mozzarella cheese on top.

Bake at 450 degrees for 8-10 minutes or until cheese is melted.

We have a few kids who are not adventurous eaters (yet) so I made a pepperoni pizza for them.  Mozzarella cheese with a few pepperoni.  No sauce.  It didn’t even need the sauce.

The NAAN is kind of like a pita, but it has a different flavor.  It’s a little salty (which I LOVED) so I would definitely try it with this specific bread instead of substituting for something else.

All you moms who don’t love cooking (or do love cooking), let me know if you try this and what you think!

Sibling love

I am constantly grateful these two boys have each other.  To play with.  To love.  To wrestle.  To terrorize.  To just BE together.  What a life-long blessing to have a sibling to grow up with and be an integral part of your life story.  Though we didn’t plan to have them so close together, I am thankful it worked out the way it did.  Caleb adores his older brother and I hope it always stays that way.  And Carter refuses to sit by Caleb at meal time because he’s “too messy”.

They keep me oh-so-busy.  And I’m already dreading the day they both go to school and I’ll be buddy-less during the day.  Boo.  Double Boo.

Boys, you’re lucky to have each other.  Don’t ever forget that.

Picture Display Movement. Step 2. Load and Back up.

{Click here for Step 1 of Project Picture Display}

After I am focused on taking more photos, the next step is to get them on my computer.

I’m really good about doing this with my dSLR, but horrible about doing it with my phone.  Some pictures sit on my phone for months before I ever put them on my computer.  And a lot of the pictures I take these days are with my camera phone for convenience/logistical issues.  (I’m still busy just trying to keep track of the four little humans I usually have around me and all the “stuff” that seems to accompany them).  And without that handy camera phone, I’d miss pictures like this.  Of my kid hugging a mannequin.  Not weird at all.

Here’s the key to the rest of The Picture Display Movement.  There HAS to be a system and it has to be SIMPLE or it will never get done.  So find a system.  Schedule a consistent time to do it.  And keep it simple!!  We schedule time to clean.  Time to do laundry.  Time to exercise.  We should DEFINITELY schedule time to organize, print, and display our photos.

Here’s the system that works for me.  This will have to be tweaked for each family just like chore charts have to be tweaked for each family (still working on fine tuning our chore/money system), but find something, anything, that works for you and stick to it.

I load my photos directly into iPhoto.  When I plug in my camera or phone to my computer, iPhoto automatically pops up and the pictures go straight in there.  The pictures automatically sort by date.

Once the pictures are loaded, I make sure they are backed up onto an external hard drive.  You can get those at Costco.  I just bought a 3TB external drive (most people won’t need one that big) for about $120.  Worth every penny if my computer hard drive crashes.  This is a step that should never be skipped.  It’s not hard and only takes a few extra minutes.  You can just drag and drop the photos onto the icon for the hard drive and it copies them to the hard drive.

2015-05-14_0001I also back up my entire computer hard-drive to an online site.  I researched several online storage companies and finally settled with Backblaze because it is unlimited storage for a really affordable price ($5 per month) and it allows me to back up all my external hard-drives as well (as long as I plug them in every 30 days).  I have 7 full external hard drives and a nearly full computer hard drive.  I see the “your startup disc is almost full” message more times than I care to keep track of.

Screen Shot 2015-05-14 at 5.23.43 PMI need a lot of storage space.  Backblaze backs up my entire hard drive (photos, documents, music, etc.) so if (more like when) my hard-drive crashes, I know everything is backed up on Backblaze.

When deciding on an online storage company, I wanted something that was:

1. affordable

2. I personally knew someone who used the company to recover photos

3. unlimited storage including external hard drives

So after looking at and comparing several well-known companies (and talking to several photographer friends), I decided on Backblaze.

 

If your photos aren’t backed up, I can not emphasize enough that you NEED to do this step.  Even if your photos are a big hot-mess right now.  Back them up.  Then worry about organizing.  Trust me on this one.

 

 

Step 2.  Load ’em and BACK THEM UP!!!

Click here for Step 3.  ORGANIZE those Photos.

(Join thousands of others and Subscribe to the blog–in the right margin–if you want more great stuff!)

 

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