This little one is such a sweet, special child. Holding him is like having a calming palm laid against my heart. In these crazy days of manic work schedules and chaotic family life, I have had almost no time to meditate. Yet, when Tom and I sit alone in the dark, welcoming the first streaks of dawn on the early morning sky, I feel happier and more at peace than at any other time in my life. He is a gentle, gentle, tranquil soul x
Last Days...
Posted on: Monday, May 13, 2013
By next weekend our family will be four.
A brand new baby will be passed between our arms, held and cherished and butterfly kissed by the gentle light of the autumn sun.
A little person full of promise and wonder - an old soul to teach us - a sibling to play with - a child to adore.
Hurry up my angel baby, we are eager to stare in rapture at your sublime, perfect features and feel your tiny beating heart against our own.
We love you already x
Photography: Angela Steyn
The Countdown
Posted on: Saturday, April 27, 2013
In amongst the complete chaos of my world (think mountains of paperwork and fabric samples piled up beneath a graveyard of broken toys and stale biscuits) it has suddenly dawned on me that I have just two weeks until we welcome our no. 2 bambino into the world - if indeed our no. 2 is as punctual as our no. 1 who arrived right on schedule (he is a Virgo after all!).
I have just taken on a stack of new clients in the past week - how I imagine juggling them all along with a newborn and a boisterous toddler is totally beyond me but I suspect it has something to do with being in complete denial about just how much our lives are going to be altered by the joy, wonder and ear-splitting cries of a teeny weeny baby.
The first time around I wasn't self-employed. I finished work 7 weeks before the baby came... 7 WEEKS!!! My God, how insanely decadent. I pottered around making pretty little things to go in the baby's room. I took yoga classes 3 times a week. I cleaned our apartment from top to bottom with a toothbrush. I had massages and went for long, ambling walks in the sunshine.
This time, the baby has to stick a foot into the side of my tummy with as much force as possible for me to even stop for two seconds to remember that I'm pregnant. There have been no massages, no yoga classes and certainly no afternoons lying on the sofa reading magazines. I have managed to wash the baby clothes but they sit in the laundry basket where they will no doubt remain until we bring our little bundle home from the hospital. Life could not be more different.
But here is the question... would I change anything? Not a chance. I love the life that Andre and I have fought so hard to build. I love the fact that we live immersed in creativity (which just so happens to also be our work). Yes, I could use a few more hours sleep a night. Yes, I wish I could slow down the clocks. Yes, I wish I could carve out a few more peaceful moments to sit in quiet meditation with my baby. But our world is such a beautiful blend of happiness that I feel my soul renewed daily by the craziness.
So watch this space folks. Tick, tick, tick... the scenic route of life is about to get a bit rough under foot for a while!
Sensory Play for Toddlers - Coloured Rice & Beans
Posted on: Tuesday, April 16, 2013
Sensory play for toddlers - coloured rice & beans |
I have a beautiful German friend called Sarah who leads the kind of life I can only imagine. Her world is full of scandi-inspired wooden toys, organic food and lots of handmade pretty "stuff". Her life is the life I would lead if only I could be bothered to locate and dust off the sewing machine which has inched its way further and further into the depths of our roof storage. Yesterday Leo and I popped over for a play and were met with more fabulous homemade creativity - this time in the form of sensory play tubs filled with coloured rice and beans. Hours of entertainment right there! Chubby little hands sifting through the grain, pouring, scooping, mixing and inevitably spilling... magic to watch. Follow the instructions below to make your own coloured rice.
How to Make Coloured Rice
You will need:
- Large quantity of white rice
- White vinegar
- Liquid food colouring (in a variety of colours)
- Large glass jar
Method:
- Mix 2 tablespoons vinegar with a few drops of food colouring in the jar
- Add 2 cups of rice
- Shake like crazy
- When colour is completely absorbed, tip rice out onto a baking tray and pop in a low oven to dry out
- Repeat for different colours
Photography: Angela Steyn
The Long, Fleeting Days
Posted on: Thursday, April 11, 2013
With the passing days of being a Mama I wonder if I will remember all the things about my child that delight my soul and fill my heart to bursting. The early morning sleepy smiles, the chubby hand absent-mindedly stroking my cheek, the shrieks of joy as he gallops past on the back of my husband, blonde curls bouncing, head bobbing. The way he struggles valiantly to string words together correctly to form a sentence, his face earnest and furrowed in concentration. His untainted perception of the world. His love of apple chippies, marshmallows and "teeny" bits of chocolate that he insists on sharing with his Dada. The make-believe bath time chatter, his love of odd bod toys and bits of scrap paper. His pride in doing his daily chores like feeding the cat and passing me the bed pillows. Most of all, I wonder if I will recall the exact sound of his laughter that fills our home with the kind of joy that can sustain a soul for eternity.
I am determined to document as much as possible as the years speed by, determined not to let the accumulation of long days bleach my memories of their beauty so they lie like a pile of faded photographs on my psyche. These precious days are fleeting - one day, too soon from now, he will no longer want to crawl on my lap and press his sticky face against mine for comfort. Too soon he will have grown up. Too soon I will have grown old.
Photography: Angela Steyn
Nature's Child
Leo and I like to wander up and down the streets around our house collecting things to photograph. Mostly we pick up interesting leaves, funny looking sticks, pretty flowers and clusters of berries, all of which get piled into the tray of his trike with stern-faced, serious care. I love that he is learning to open his eyes to the natural world around him, that he is learning to see beauty in the most seemingly insignificant details of life. My greatest hope is that it will lead to an ability to be completely present in the moment - a moment filled with wonder and glory.
Photography: Angela Steyn
White Painted Floorboards - A Veteran's Story
Posted on: Sunday, April 7, 2013
I have spent a vast proportion of my adult life hankering after white painted floorboards. Looking back, my infatuation probably began the very same day that I discovered the simple, fresh, austere beauty of Scandinavian interiors. One look at all that blinding whiteness and I was completely brainwashed.
So finally, one day, after endless discussions with my husband, we made the trip to our hardware store and purchased a very large tin of white paving paint. Having researched it to death, we concluded that regular paint wouldn't be tough enough to withstand the beating it would take in our home studio. The first strike of the paint roller was nerve wracking to say the least, but not quite as heart-stopping perhaps as the point where half-way through the first coat we looked at each other and silently screamed "Mary Mother of God, what the hell have we done"!
Two coats later and our floor looked so sparkling and spectacular you needed sunglasses just to be in the vague vicinity of it. It was breathtakingly gorgeous and serene. We leapt and hugged and patted each other on the back, congratulating ourselves on our "fearless" and "brave" decorating choice. "Ha!" I shouted, "We are designers God damn it and we shall have white floorboards no matter how fool hardy my mother thinks we are"!
I did love our white floor (we have since moved to a different home) but by crikey let me tell you it was not the easiest of loves to live with. Everything, and I mean everything showed up on it like it was being examined in a science lab. God forbid you should attempt to eat a biscuit at your desk or cut fabric. Let alone the endless shedding of hair (me, Andre, Daphne Cat). To clean it - which we did every other day, first with the vacuum, then the mop - I would get down on my hands and knees and scrape icky goo off with a kitchen knife. Be warned, it is a particularly exhausting floor colour choice for anyone suffering even mildly from OCD.
So while I still love to look at beautiful homes sporting stunning white floorboards, I'm not sure my sanity (or my marriage) could withstand living with them again... unless we got a cleaner... who came every single day.
For our floor, we used White Knight paving paint in White and applied it using a roller.
Images
The Magic Power of The Blue Bean
Posted on: Friday, March 29, 2013
What is the number one treatment for all ailments in our house? The humble blue jellybean. The miraculous healing properties of this colour-coated bullet of glucose goodness completely astound me. From bumped heads to bruised toes, this little gem can take away pain faster than you can say "pass the Detol". Leo has ingeniously discovered that in order to activate its magic powers, you must first rub it on the injury - vigorously, preferably leaving a bright blue mark - before popping it in your mouth and requesting another one. Tears are stemmed, laughter returns and equilibrium is restored, all in the blink of an eye.
If you are planning on using the magic bean treatment remember that only blue jellybeans will work - other colours are for other things. To save confusion, here is a list as dictated by my son:
Red: when you want to transform into a superhero
Yellow: feeling sad (1 bean = 1 happy sunbeam)
White: exceptionally good behaviour
Pink: for girls
Purple: for mamas
Green: for papas
Orange: for colds
Black: for the cat
Black: for the cat
It has been proven that a little shot of glucose does wonders for shock, so while the placebo effect of the blue bean cannot be denied, the sugar hit will also help calm a distraught child. So I would highly recommend that you keep a jar of these babies right next to the First Aid kit for fuss-free toddler trauma.
Photography: Angela Steyn
Sunday Wanderer
Posted on: Monday, March 25, 2013
We are officially old. Yesterday we went for a Sunday drive. Partly so a small boy would sleep in the car, partly so we could sit in air-conditioned comfort on a hot day, but mostly because we just wanted to get out of the city and look at stuff. Yep... old! The thing with these sorts of outings is that you invariably discover little hidden gems that you had absolutely no intention of discovering. Our meandering drive took us to the little riverside village of Brooklyn, about 50km from Sydney on the Hawkesbury River. In amongst the rusted out old dinghies and fishing paraphernalia that seemed to stretch as far as the eye could see, we stumbled upon Hang - Nicole Ruiz Gallery and coffee shop. Heaven I'm telling you! As we sat on beaten-up retro vintage furniture sipping our chilli-infused chai tea and eating ice-cream with chocolate sauce, it occurred to me that some of the most lovely moments in life come quietly and unexpectedly, tapping you on the shoulder with a gentle hand to remind you that happiness and simplicity are the very best of friends.
Midnight Ramblings of a Heavily Pregnant Insomniac
Posted on: Friday, March 22, 2013
It's 4am, there's a dog barking somewhere outside and I have a cat trying to drink my cup of tea. What on earth am I doing sitting at my computer, you may well ask. Excellent question. You try going back to sleep after being called by a distraught toddler to change a wet bed and then having a little inside creature tap dance across your belly wearing what can only be described as clay clogs. I used to be able to sleep - these days not so much.
So what keeps me up at night once my little person has drifted back to sleep and the baby has given up on trying to kick its way out of solitary confinement? Oh you know, the usual stuff... remembering that I forgot to book the electrician for an interiors job (the same job that I forgot to order the wallpaper for, yet remembered to order the wrong rug)... thinking about how we'll manage with two children when some days we seem totally incapable of wrangling one... contemplating death (is it just me, or do others get completely overwhelmed in the darkness by the sheer inescapable truth of it?)... wondering if its possible to make it through an entire pregnancy without purchasing a single maternity item... worrying that I spent too much money at Priceline again (can one really put a monetary value on frizz-free hair and oral hygiene?).
But perhaps the biggest thing keeping me up lately is an unspeakable fear that I might not be able to love my next baby as much as the little boy asleep in the room next door with his cherub curls laid out on his pillow like an offering to the gods. Writing the words feels sacriligious, like I've defamed and blemished my mothering right. The rational part of me knows that I will love the new baby just as powerfully and passionately as the first - of course I will. But it seems almost unfathomable. Sometimes when my son looks at me with aquatic eyes full of such intense love and joy, I feel so humbled I could weep with the beauty of it. His hilarious daily attempts at communication, combined with a personality that oscillates with whip-cracking alacrity from head strong viking to soft, thoughtful angel, make being with him a challenging delight (or perhaps a delightful challenge?). He is my heart in its entirety. How is it possible to feel what I feel all over again?
My Mum has a theory about love and shoeboxes (is the link not obvious?). It goes something like this... love is not a thing that we can quantify and contain in a shoebox. We do not have an infinite supply. Love is self-renewing and self-generating. Essentially, love is boundless, bottomless and eternal. I know this to be true so why do I worry? I guess its like being given the world only to realise that you will be given the world all over again - does your prior experience of cradling such beauty render the experience less powerful or does it simply make your heart expand even further so that you feel it more intensely?
Questions, questions. In my soul I know that I will cherish this incredible new being, that I will stare at it in the darkness with the same inconceivable wonder, that my tears will anoint its perfect head as it lays in my arms. I know that our lives will be enriched by the wonder of a new baby, that in an instant we won't be able to remember what it was like to be three and that the little soul who joins us will be a gift of pure love. I know with certainty that our home will be filled with the chaotic laughter (and bickering) of siblings and that our children will love each other in a way that is all their own.
"OK Mama, go back sleepies now" as my eldest child would say. Think I might go make another cup of tea and watch the sunrise with the cat instead.
Top Image: Emma Durkin
Bottom Image: Angela Steyn
Sleeping Monkey
Posted on: Wednesday, March 20, 2013
My little boy, you are a constant ball of energy, a
firecracker exploding into glorious colour every waking minute of each day.
You zip this way and that, darting around my legs with a ferocious lust
for discovery and a keen eye on the jellybean jar. Your grubby, chubby
little hands take life by the throat, exhausting every drip of goodness that
can be found. Then, like a daisy at dusk, you close up and collapse into
a comatose state of angelic peace. Oh to be two years old and on the cusp
of self-discovery. Enjoy the journey gorgeous child and I shall continue
to sit by your bedside and watch your precious eyelids flutter like butterfly
wings against the morning sky.
The Little Things Break My Heart
Posted on: Sunday, October 21, 2012
Once upon a time I was told by a doctor wearing a Rolex and a skiing tan that I might never be a Mama... now when I catch sight of my little boy's shoes left lying around the house, or his collection of trucks lined up at the back door, my heart breaks a little wider from the love it is so desperately trying to contain. These mundane things are pieces of evidence of a life I never dared dream possible. I would like to thank the angels for putting small, grubby shoes on my chair x
How To Be Cool - Tips From a Toddler
Posted on: Saturday, August 11, 2012
Leo's total need, desire and ability to express his individuality inspires me daily. I wish I could protect this part of his character from future conformity, preserving it in a jar so that I can present it to him on his 21st birthday as the ultimate gift of self-liberation! He is without a doubt, the coolest person I know. Here is what I have learned from my son...
1. Always wear a hat - preferably with attitude.
2. Pretending to be someone you're not is fine provided that nobody actually believes you.
3. Don't be afraid to tell people exactly what you want, as loudly as possible, over and over again.
4. Socks should never ever match, unless you are wearing them on your hands.
5. Making people laugh is way more fun than laughing at other people.
6. Always ride your trike like you stole it.
7. Gumboots and nudity go together like chocolate sauce and icecream.
8. You can go far in life by flashing a dimple.
9. Marching down the street, singing at the top of your lungs and waving a big stick is damned good fun!
10. Exist totally, one hundred percent in the moment and life will just take care of itself.
Photo: Angela Steyn
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