If I could just post one photo from the party

I’d be a very decisive person.

It’s hard! trying to photograph kinetics well in a blacklit bowling alley.
Chas was airborne most of the time; those balls didn’t weigh him down one bit.
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We have a handful of sweet moments that translated to image. For instance, here was Chas, just after he had taken…
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…this image:
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And Ford grabbed to Polaroid himself to capture a little Whitman craziness:
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and a little mommy/daddiness:
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Then Damon took a mellow polaroid:
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and turned it into something absolutely fabulous:
Birthday Joy
Cheers to indecision! If it weren’t my bedtime I’d post them all.
Oh! And cheers to Daddies that stencil tshirts for birthday favors!
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and cheers again to Chazzy!
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To Chas, on your Third Birthday

Hi Chas, Birthday Boy, Mister 3,

Three years ago I walked down the white fluorescent aisles of Target with a package of toilet paper rolls, counting the bear hugs I’d felt all evening get closer and closer: twelve minutes; eleven minutes.  Passersby smiled at the cute ball of you underneath my little black dress. I remember checking out, squinting at the red formica and conceding that you were ready to be born into the world, and that I’d help you once I’d unloaded the groceries at home and packed my overnighter.

Two hours later, you were banging on the escape hatch as I walked the halls of labor & delivery. Shortly after that, as I sat on the edge of the bed, my back all but in an actual vice clamp, I grimaced and felt the floor flood with warmth. I looked down, my flip-flops drenched in amniotic fluid; I looked up, and nearly puked. I think I may have puked three minutes or so later.

When the night sky began to toss and turn, bluing the atmosphere with its conscience, you crowned. I pushed twice, really hard pushes that channelled eons of mothers into Om, and out you slipped, all purple and dense and strong, wet-cry muted once blue-eyes met mine; you squinted uncertainly, then frowned at me, and I knew that you were a robust soul, and that your name couldn’t be Owen. It had to be Chas.

+ + +

We had fun today making some cupcakes for your birthday. You wanted to make devils food cupcakes, easy enough. Every now and then I couldn’t help smelling your head full of blond wildhair, my eyes closed, as if I could keep it , in my zeal, tucked within the corner of my heart. As if I could oncork that heavenly little boy smell of ozone and compost, the faint smell of detangler mixed with other unidentified sweet funk (possibly cake batter, it was hard to tell in a chocolate-scented kitchen) and smell it when you are no longer in the house, but far away in college, or possibly on a steamer ship to the arctic, or hiking the sierras, or hanging out in  your girlfriend’s parent’s house for the holidays. Wait, please never do that.

And please never stop telling me that cake makes yur muscles grow big and strong
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But I can’t bottle your boyhood any more than I can expect you to stay home every holiday. Instead, I’m catching little whiffs of it whenever I can: as you crack an egg into the mixing bowl,
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while you ice a cupcake;
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And (as you can see) I’m taking pictures often, too; I’m really trying to, at least.
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When I’m at a loss for words is when the camera shutter flutters.
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Sometimes I’m taking pictures and hardly exhaling at all. Or looking back at them as I am doing now, and wishing I didn’t have to.

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Time stand still please, just a little longer?
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Sticky Situation

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breakfast at Ikea

Ikea has the cheapest breakfast outside of the home. In fifteen minutes we can be at the table, dunking french toast sticks into a bowl of maple syrup (not ideal, but Ford’s ideal, which he serves up himself) and feeling the warm sunlight pour through the floor-to-ceiling windows, penetrating the pores, the caffeine from the Swedish coffee slipping instantly into your bloodstream as if by DMSO. The eggs are synthetic but oddly satisfying, since we are always starving and they are always served steaming hot. There are beads of syrup on the table, collecting on their t-shirts, smeared between fingers. I sit there, across the table, sipping my coffee and wondering how they can stand their filth. Judging from the quiet, they couldn’t be more content with it.

Mama says Om.