Enjoying the Small Things

Enjoying the Small Things

  • ABOUT
    • KELLE HAMPTON + ETST BLOG
    • Our Down Syndrome Journey
    • Down Syndrome: Our Family Today
    • PRESS
  • the book
  • The Blog
    • Make Stuff
    • Family
    • Favorites
    • Parenting
    • Parties
    • Style
    • Travel
  • Once Upon A Summer PDF
  • Printables
  • CONTACT

A page from our storybook: The Lake

August 13, 2011 By Kelle

Wednesday night delivered. Good conversation, parking lot cartwheels.

Photobucket

Okay, ready? Laugh. Act natural. Pretend there’s not a self timer beeping in 3, 2, 1…and click.



Photobucket

Left: The Leprechaun Shuffle, Right: The Flash Mob Two-Step



All is well. (more on this and my friend next week)

And my girl is so happy to have her friends return.

Photobucket

*****

The Universe was kind last night. Like unicorn variety of kind.

Behold, the rainbow.

Photobucket

Behold, the sky swallowed up in magnificent lightning.

Photobucket

Behold, the cat came skipping up our driveway last night like he was just rolling in after Spring Break in Cabo.

It was a good day. To top it off, we took a leisurely stroll to the lake just as the sun was setting and our rainbow’s brilliance faded into washed-out pastels.

Photobucket

Photobucket

I took the liberty of adding the rainbow back in.

We were welcomed by friendly ducks who entertained the girls with their waddle.

Photobucket

Photobucket Interference.



Someday the girls will discover that The Lake is really a pond and that the magic we create there is intentional in spite of the reality that it’s not the most picturesque “lake.” In fact, I make it a point to crop out the ugly blue machine that regulates the water–the one that is so cleverly hidden behind the ficus hedge but still screams “unnatural” with its vibrant blue paint and hissing pump sounds.

To my girls, our lake is storybook.

Photobucket

To my girls, it is a Beatrix Potter setting.

Photobucket

Where friendly ducks float into marshes.

Photobucket

And hungry bass chase Dora fishing pole bait.

Photobucket

I love to see things through the eyes of my girls. To let the blue water pump fade behind lush greens and ignore the fact that one side of “the lake” opens to traffic and passengers ogling our adventures. My girls don’t see that.

Photobucket

And when I’m with them long enough, neither do I.

Photobucket

Photobucket

Last night, we hiked the mountains; we absorbed the tranquility only a spectacular lake view like ours could offer.

Photobucket

Photobucket

And like Christmas memories that age like wine–sweeter, richer, finer–I have to smile at every one of our adventures. Storybook tales for my girls. To retell years from now over Thanksgiving dinners, sister sleepovers, Christmas Eve night.

Remember our trips to the lake?

Photobucket

You mean that crappy pond with the red ant piles and those disease-infested ducks?



No, the lake. Our lake. The one with the big tree that lost all its leaves in that January frost. The one that caught the western sun with its reflection and turned the glassy waters pink like salmon. The one where I caught my first fish and you took a million pictures. The one with the picnics. The one where it rained and we had nowhere to go so we hid under the bushes until Dad came and rescued us. The one where you took Nella when she was tiny and new, and you cried as you held her but smiled when I caught your sadness. The one where we laid on blankets in October and pretended it was a Michigan fall–where we sliced apples and read books and tried to imagine the air was cool and crisp.

You know, our lake.



Photobucket

Oh yes. Now I remember. I love our lake.

Photobucket

*****

Friday Phone Dump:

Photobucket

*****

Welcome Back to sponsor, Tea Collection. I love all of the Tea articles in my girls’ closet (Lainey’s painter overalls are my all-time favorite), but I was just peeking at some new arrivals for Fall and fell in love with these pointelle leggings for Nella. Tea Collection offers comfortable, quality clothes for babies and kids, and I love the unique global inspiration they bring to their clothing.

From their Mercado Mexicano line: Nella’s dress in this post–Ciudadela smocked dress.

Photobucket

Tea Collection’s current Modern Mexico line is full of rich, vibrant colors and, as always, comfortable global style. Free shipping on any order for just a couple more days (ends 8/14) using Code GOTHERE.

*****

My girl’s room is almost finished and I am loving how it turned out.

Hope your weekend is storybook.

Photobucket

Filed Under: Our Florida Home, Photo Dump 128 Comments

Big World

August 1, 2011 By Kelle

Saturday night, we smoothed the edges of our blanket against a flat plane of sand at Lowdermilk Beach and burrowed holes in brown sugar to anchor our plastic wine glasses.

Photobucket

Far out in the gulf, a curtain of storm clouds and thick sheets of rain contrasted brilliantly with neighboring blue skies and cotton clouds, and we watched and cautiously waited for the former to overpower the latter, a cue to pack up and move out.

Photobucket

But they dwelled in safe harmony, at least long enough for us to enjoy the luxuries of a beach sunset for a little while.

Photobucket

We cheered and pointed when the sleek backs of dolphins emerged in shallow waters not far from shore, and we ran along the edge of the tide, following their path.

Photobucket

Nana Kate scooped up my girls in grandmotherly fashion while I volleyed my wonder between the exhilerated faces of my happy beach babies and the effortless beauty and grace of a woman I adore.

Photobucket

Photobucket

Lainey thinks her granddaugter, Katie Claire, is some sort of Hannah Montana. If Katie says it, it’s true; if Katie wears it, it’s cool; if Katie gives you something, it’s your favorite. These are the rules, and we abide by them.

Photobucket

Photobucket

Photobucket

Finally, the gulf storm got bored and started showing off with flashy lightning and intimidating thunder, and so we packed it and headed out. Just as we were leaving and I balanced a dangling Nella with my overflowing bag of beach toys, I turned back to see the sun, its pink haze highlighted by lightning that periodically zig-zagged across the horizon. And right there I felt that realization of I am small and the World is big. The experience of watching the sun set is humbling and such an appropriate representation of my beliefs on faith, or at least what it should be. It’s big. Available to everyone. Perceived and practiced differently by diverse groups of people and rightly so. Grounding, comforting, uniting, intriguing and beautiful all in one. No walls to constrain it, no book to govern it. There, on that beach, that sunset was mine.

Photobucket

*****

The weekend delivered.

Photobucket

We were entertained by a whole lot of nothing.

Photobucket

Photobucket

I had to smile last night as I passed the entrance of our garage and spotted a small rainbow and abandoned chalk. She’s asked me to help her draw them so many times– following my instructions for another bow of color, and then another–but she’s never been able to draw one unassisted. But there, chalked symmetrically onto cement was her rainbow. And I am happy. I want to teach my girls to draw rainbows on their own, to independently choose colors and find places to make their mark. She did it…all by herself.

Photobucket

And then I went inside and, scribbled in red lipstick on my bathroom mirror, was a unicorn. Just kidding. But seriously, how cool would that have been?

Weekends are good for long, leisurely swims. And little sisters who watch big sisters from the sidelines.

Photobucket

Photobucket

Photobucket

Weekends are good for frozen grapes…

Photobucket

…and walk practice…

Photobucket

Photobucket

…and scaredy cats.

Photobucket

But really, there’s not much weekends aren’t good for.

Photobucket

Photobucket

Photobucket

Later this week, I’ll be in San Diego for BlogHer. I’m excited to learn new things and meet some incredible new people. If you’ll be there and want to pow-wow, find me on Facebook and let me know! Big world, Baby.

*****

Your weekend dream descriptions were fun to read. The fabulous Popina swimsuit dream came true for Comment #805, Meg: your weekends sound like ours. Two cups of coffee mornings and last minute gatherings with friends. Love it. Your time without your husband sound the same as well. Badassness like there is something to prove. Love it too.

Congratulations, Meg. Please send your contact info to kellehamptonblog@comcast.net and start shopping for some retro fabulousness.

And don’t forget, the coupon code ends soon for Net Nanny. Monitor your kids’ computer use and safety with 25% off Net Nanny software. Coupon Code HAMPTON for 25% off.

*****

Hope your week kicks off with a great Monday.

Photobucket

Filed Under: Enjoying, Our Florida Home 119 Comments

Friday, At Last

July 29, 2011 By Kelle

At this moment, from my desk chair, I can peer between the blind slats of our office/soon-to-be-Lainey’s-room window and view a scene that summarizes the goodness of summer, the commencement of a lazy weekend, the celebration of a daddy who’s returned after a four-day retreat. A shallow puddle of water from an abandoned running hose slowly spreads across our driveway cement, and tiny wet footprints escape from its edge. There are barefoot babies, a mess of trikes, a bottle of bubbles tipped over and spilled, and a beach chair throne erected in the thick of it where Brett sits, content, as bright sky fades to dim sky fades to dark sky.

I love Friday nights. We make a big deal of weekends with its waffles and coffee refills and no-such-thing-as-time mentality, but really the peak of a weekend’s glory is all about the Friday night. It’s the Christmas Eve of Weekend. The potential of really great things.

Photobucket

While Brett was gone, I remembered to haul garbage cans to the curb, lock the doors, dim the lights, and I only had to scrape dog poop out of our entryway rug once. It’s amazing just how much I get done when I am motivated to prove a point to myself. Something about badassery, I guess, but still–knowing I am capable is satisfying.

I worked harder, stayed up later, woke up earlier, kissed more, cleaned more, and was that more aware to be present.

I enjoyed them so much this week.

Photobucket
Bed photos: ISO 800, f/2.8, 1/50 s (16-35 mm) , no flash

Last night, I tucked them into my bed later than usual. Lainey fell asleep quickly and easily while I staved off Nella who laughed and babbled and tried to scale her sister’s body, no doubt aware she wasn’t to be disturbed. Finally, her steady breaths joined her sister’s, and I huddled over them, studying my favorite features. Paper thin eyelids that beg to be kissed, soft wisps of hair swept over forehead, shallow slopes at the tops of their noses where I run my finger again and again.

Photobucket

There is a magic to a sleeping child–a spell cast on the beholder. When I watch my children breathe steadily as they dream and peacefully sleep, I am so acutely aware of the gift they are, and I am smitten with love in a breathless moment of They Belong to Me.

Photobucket

Photobucket

Big, big love.

*****

We enthusiastically welcomed our morning today with an early hike along a stretch of boardwalk near my dad’s place. The setting was picturesque, brilliantly enhanced with dabbled sunlight and lush greens. Perhaps it was my last hoorah in proving I was a badass before Brett came home, a valid proclamation evident from our trek across the finish line an hour after we commenced.

But first, I felt brave and ambitious as we approached the starting line of our journey. The sun was angled for comfortable shade, Latte was trotting energetically, Lainey had a half-skip to her step, and Nella smiled and waved as the wheels of her car ka-bump, ka-bump, ka-bumped over each boardwalk plank.

Photobucket

We stopped to collect pinecones.

Photobucket

We paused to snap pictures of grasshoppers.

Photobucket

And the half-way point took my breath away with its mirror image clouds and rippled water–like Monet’s stippled paintings.

Photobucket

It was peaceful, that half-way point.

We stared at still water, waiting for the surface to break with a manatee snout or dolphin fin, but the gulf was quiet, and so we made up for it in meaningful chatter. I answered questions like “Mama, what are bears afraid of? What do pigs give us? What do cows eat?” because she’s enthralled with this food chain idea lately and wants so badly to make sense of it. Before I could answer what makes a bear fearful, she answered her own question with her quip of “I think bears are afraid of themselves–when they look in the mirror”–and then she laughed and carried on.

Photobucket

Photobucket

Photobucket

Photobucket

Photobucket

Everything changed the moment we turned to walk home. The sun climbed higher, the mosquitoes grew hungry, the dog started panting, Nella fell asleep and Lainey insisted her Build-a-Bear wanted to sit by himself in the push car.

What began as a semi-manageable congregation of toddler plus baby plus dog-on-leash turned into a living hell. For three quarters of a mile, I walked–holding a camera case; guiding a leash; cradling a slippery, sweaty baby; slapping mosquitoes; and thrusting my hips to push a car with a grumpy toddler and a lazy stuffed bear.

I tasted the salt from my sweat as it streamed down my temples and beaded above my lip. And with every ka-bump, ka-bump, ka-bump on the way back, I alternated curse words with the little bits I knew of the Serenity prayer.

Photobucket

But we made it. Home. At last. And Brett pulled in late this afternoon, and now we are complete.

Photobucket

Photobucket

Looking forward to the weekend.

*****

Friday Phone Dump:
Photobucket

*****
Giveaway Winner:

I wish blogs had sound effects because I’d do some really cool Price is Right call down for giveaway winners. Just imagine it.

(I’m yelling really enthusiastically): “And the winner of the Scentsy cupcake warmer and Happy Birthday bar is…(drum roll, drum roll, Bob Barker freak out…)”

Comment #22, Alisha: That last photo melted my heart. Nella looks so grown up sitting at the table and the way she is looking so adoringly at her big sister is SO beautiful.

Congratulations, Alisha. Sorry it’s not a new car. Please send your contact info to kellehamptonblog@comcast.net, and your house will never stink again.

*****

Re-Introducing:

One of our favorite sponsors is returning this month: Popina Swimwear. I’ve proclaimed my allegiance for their retro swimwear in several posts, and it’s true–I love their butt-hugging, breast-boosting, waist-cinching vintage suits. So much, I occasionally wear them under jeans out and about when I’m feeling a little Betty Boop.

Photobucket

Picking a swimsuit to wear from my collection of Popina suits is like choosing what my babies will wear their first day home (You remember that? It’s so much fun). Every option is good.

One of my favorites: The Grace. Very Beach Blanket Bingo, Baby.

Photobucket

Wear it. Love it. Shop for yours here.

Oh, and giveaways make weekends better. Popina is kindly giving away a swimsuit of winner’s choice to a commenter who will be randomly selected from this post. Tell me what you hope your weekend looks like.

Ours: Quiet. Coffee. Long Bath. Lying on the floor in the living room watching some old Meg Ryan movie while kids climb on me and play with my hair. Unplanned gatherings with friends. Hot grill. Hot pavement. Bare feet. Music. Writing. Sleep.

*****

Happy Weekend.

Photobucket

Filed Under: Our Florida Home, Photo Dump 890 Comments

  • « Previous Page
  • 1
  • …
  • 6
  • 7
  • 8
  • 9
  • 10
  • …
  • 17
  • Next Page »
  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • Pinterest
  • RSS
  • Twitter

Popular Posts

Shop My Favorites

Keep In Touch

Bucket Lists

ARCHIVES

Archives


“One of the most emotionally stirring books I’ve ever read….a reminder that a mother’s love for her child is a powerful, eternal, unshakable force.”
Ree Drummond, The Pioneer Woman
  • Home
  • About this Blog
  • BLOG
  • BLOOM
  • Favorites
  • Parties
  • PRESS
  • CONTACT

Copyright © 2026 · Kelle Hampton & Enjoying the Small Things · All Rights Reserved