four of five • the uslander family

little ones, outdoors, studio, we are family

Another wonderful family I’ve met through Riviera PlaySchool…& another family on the move…Sandy & Bob are headed out of Los Angeles to points south for new adventures, but before they leave, we celebrated with some new headshots & family portraits! Their two gorgeous sons were at the session, rough-housing like loving brothers & lighting up the day with their big grins; but we missed having their daughter here too. Hopefully she’ll enjoy seeing her family together in these pictures–she was mentioned all through the shoot. I so enjoyed the inspired conversation we shared while clicking & in between set-ups; we talked about the real need & desire for all people to truly & deeply connect (with others & with ideas, through every type of vocation) & to create. Well, I feel very lucky, because I got to do both on this day with them.

pizza party • father’s day 2011 • redondo beach, ca

little ones, personal, we are family

Our friend Shannon is one of the most warm, funny, down-to-earth women I have ever known. I have been so lucky to spend time with her while we try to creatively keep our kids entertained during so many afternoons. She & her husband Chris invited us to celebrate Father’s Day with them at their gorgeous, sun-filled home. They hosted a gourmet pizza party, complete with DIY dough-rolling (& flour scattering) for the kids–as well as some impressive dough-tossing by Chris. The party was also graced by the presence of Chris’s sister, Angelyn, her husband Mark, & their adorable son Luke. And to end the evening, Shannon’s brother Chris made the most decadent popsicles (from a Bon Appetit recipe)–who knew a kids’ treat could be so rich & grown-up? Thank you to them all for the delicious dinner–& wonderful company!

non-traditional school pictures • riviera playschool • spring 2011

little ones, outdoors, preschool

My girls have been attending this amazing, unique preschool for the past couple years. I call it a “Paradise for Preschoolers,” because it encourages children to do all the things that most parents won’t allow at home: dig in the dirt, paint with their hands, splash around in the water, run barefoot through the mud–in short, get good & dirty experiencing the world around them. It’s not that I don’t allow my kids to get messy at home–it’s more that it stresses me out, because, you know, I’m the mom; I have an agenda, & that usually includes trying to return things to a tidy & clean state at some point today, or at least sometime this month.

Riviera PlaySchool‘s program is a combination of constructivist & humanist ideas; but most importantly for me, their curriculum includes a lot of work on communication & conflict resolution. They have a very good teacher-student ratio (1:4), which allows teachers to really spend a lot of time guiding kids through their struggles & frustrations. Let’s face it: Life is at least 50% difficult situations & emotions, right? We really need to help our children acquire & practice the skills that get them through that “shadow” half of living–not just teach them to obey, comply, & be nice. They will experience failure, heartbreak, & disagreements. They will witness cruelty, unfairness, & betrayal. How they respond to those things will determine their ability to succeed and be happy–which is what every parent prays for. Their ability to get through disappointment, confusion, & pain is going to be far more important than their grades or their test scores. I truly believe that–& I was a high school teacher for 11 years.

I love this school & its mission–& I have learned so much from the teachers &, as a result, improved my parenting. I feel so fortunate to have found this community for my kids & myself, & I love contributing to it in any way I can. This month, I did the student portraits, & in keeping with the spirit of PlaySchool, we kept things spontaneous & fun. I hung out & let the kids get to know me & my camera, & then one by one, we invited them to have their portraits taken. I also snapped lots of candids of them exploring their world & enjoying the PlaySchool environment–creating art, investigating bugs, communing with friends. Traditional school portraits are always so stiff & rarely show children genuinely smiling, so I hoped to create something different–lively portraits with kids authentically relaxed & being themselves–making funny faces, studying the camera contemplatively, expressing their personalities. It was a joy to get to know them all through my lens!

cutting the cord…again • zoë’s first haircut

little ones, personal, we are family

Zoë has been asking to cut her hair since February 2010. She wanted it to be like her cousin Kyle’s surfer-Beiber ‘do. Then she wanted it to be like her friend Kian’s, then like her friend Ricky’s. No mistake–she wanted it to be short. This isn’t a big deal to me–except for the fact that Zoë’s hair has never been cut. Ever. Since she was born. Over five years, her baby hair became the almost-blond paintbrush ends that grew past her waist. When she started asking to cut it, I realized that kids are so good at letting go, & that I was so sentimentally attached to her hair–& I didn’t want her to be attached the way I was. Still, I wanted to wait it out, let some time pass to see if she still wanted it, just in case we went for it, & the next day she woke up & changed her mind (as kids are wont to do). Hair grows back, but sometimes not quickly enough, as we all who have had a bad cut know. As Halloween approached last year, she changed her mind, because she wanted to dress up as Zuko, the Firebender from Avatar: The Last Airbender cartoon series, & Zuko has a long ponytail on the top of his head. So, no haircut last fall.

I started preparing myself for the Big Cut, which I thought could happen around her fifth birthday, a sort of symbolic time. In my mind, I wanted to create a meaningful rite of passage, a ceremony or party of some sort, like the kind that Jewish boys have when their hair is cut for the first time at age three. Last week Friday, she turned five. We had been celebrating all month long with playdates with friends. And of course the question of “When are we cutting my hair, Mama?” kept coming up. “Do you still want it short?” I asked. “Daddy likes it big…long…So, just cut the bottom,” she answered; I had explained that we could just trim the scraggly bits off the end, & it wouldn’t be so tangle-y & thus painful a process of brushing.

I had put it off long enough. So, on Monday, with none of the pomp & circumstance that I had hoped, we did the Big Trim. We slipped a plain white trashbag (with a hole cut in it) over Zoë’s head, sat her on a child-sized chair & took a deep breath. Max attempted a video interview, asking, “Want to say anything to your hair?” To which Zoë replied, “Nope.” Clearly more excited than sad–unlike me.

Photography is my hand-hold through the moments I find emotionally challenging. My husband makes fun of me that I’m not in the present, can’t I just put the camera down? But I am in the moment when I am taking pictures–focused in more ways than one on the little details. Photos also let me be in the moment again & again, so I can process what I might not be able to as the events unfold. True, the camera mediates my experience, but for me, it’s a Zen-like filter, distilling a moment down to its crystalline purity.

So, before the haircut, I tried my best to commemorate in photos Zoë’s Hair, the hair that was like an old-growth forest–untouched & embodying the Beginning. How could I capture all that hair meant to me–it’s length, it’s movement, it’s texture, & all the things about it that can’t be touched or seen? I tried my best to make the kind of pictures that would help me let go of that baby hair–& at the same time, accept the passage of time that had somehow fast-forwarded us to Zoë being five. I had to curb my clicking–like an addict that has to cut herself off & tell herself that it’ll be alright without more.

And here are my two girls with the hair that grew on their little heads when they were inside my body…

And so the time finally came for me to separate the baby from the girl…

And I gave Zoë a brand new, “Big Girl” hairbrush all her own to mark this special occasion. We asked her after if she felt more grown up (because she definitely looked it), & she raised her eyes up & thought about it for a moment. With a big smile, she replied, “Kind of.”