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Goss & Hermeyer Photography

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San Diego based wedding and family photographers

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Goss & Hermeyer Photography

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Nature's cure

March 16, 2020 Christine Goss
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We brought the family on a hike on Day 2 of social distancing, determined to keep our minds clear and our bodies moving. Of course, we had to watch Frozen 2 first so that I could see what happened. I’ve never related more to Olaf in my entire life.

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We decided to hike the hills behind our house to limit our contact with others and because Hailey has never joined us on “artichoke mountain” before. This was such a great learning and bonding experience for our family. Hailey got to find snails and was ever so careful to avoid them. The boys charged up the hill, as if they had boundless energy and no fear of climbing hills, and Hailey and I took the hills slowly and one step at a time. We took that opportunity to practice counting to 10 and then to 20. It was a fun little game of “Mommy will carry you up this massive hill for 10 seconds, and then you walk for 20 seconds, and then sadly repeat until mommy passes out.”

I love hiking with Hailey because she gets tired and starts to say, “I can’t do this,.” This is always my chance to be her biggest fan and life coach. Look, yes, this is hard, but we’ve done hard things before. Then I insert some distracting example of a time that she did something REALLY hard.

Just like this current situation, there are two important things we always have to do with faced with a hard challenge:

1. take a deep, healing breath and

2. take it one step at a time, then repeat this cycle until we’ve made it up the literal or figurative hill.

My favorite part of this? I get to hold my daughter’s hand and teach her how to face challenges in a controlled way. We feel the fear and step into it anyway. Then we ALWAYS turn around, look at that hill we just dominated, and she screams “WE DID IT! WE MADE IT!”

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Mason and I made it our mission to take pictures of all the flowers we found on the trail with the plan to look them up at home and read about them. We also looked for new or creepy bugs and took pictures of them, too.

We stopped, enjoyed the fresh air, the slowing of our hearts after the climb, and tried to find our house in the distance. We also pretended we could see Auntie’s house too, even though, according to Mason she lives in the boonies and another country.

On the walk down the hill, I asked them to walking slowly and be aware of their footing, but of course they charged forward without minding my words at all. However, we try to allow them to explore and learn with a bit more freedom in nature than we can afford them on the busy streets.

Hailey whispered to Mason, “I’m scared to fall” and he said, “then hold my hand.”

She fell down a few minutes later and Mason bent down, hugged her, helped her up, and whispered, “That’s what big brothers are for: to help their sisters and keep them safe.” Can we just take a moment and appreciate the sweet nature of that kid? He may be hell on wheels most days, but he surely loves his people.

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Next time, join us on our adventure? Well, not physically because then I’d have to run away from you to keep my distance, but you know, bring your family out into nature. Reconnect with the earth, your breath, and your family. I promise, it is worth it. Unless you get lost, have to drink your own pee or breastmilk, and then realize you were just behind the hill from your house. If you think that might happen to you, maybe bring a GPS.

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In COVID-19, Journal Tags San Diego family photographer
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Cloudy days and sunny dispositions

March 14, 2020 Christine Goss
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Let me start this off by saying, this is Jenny, and I have a very silly bone in my body, so don’t take anything in the blog too seriously. I mean, yes, it is here to potentially give you some ideas, but we are on day ONE of this mess and I am fully aware that I will run out of steam by like, tomorrow.

So, what should we do with these kiddos all day long? Well, today we started off by bringing them to Mission Trails to stomp in puddles and go on a hike. It involved wet clothes, chocolate egg bribes, and a lot of laughing. We are trying to abide by the social distancing philosophy, but we knew we woudln’t see anyone and if we did, we could keep our 6-15 foot distance. When we were leaving out hike, the kids and our dog were all high on joy and low on energy.

Home for PB&J and NAP TIME. My Daughter, Hailey, told me, “can we skip lunch and just sleep?” That's my girl. Naps are life.

Then we colored, and colored, and colored, broke up some fights because I left the room for one minute and that’s all it takes for my kids to go Lord of the Flies on each other with colored pencils, and then colored some more (surprisingly not with each others blood, but it was a close call).

Hailey made cookies with my husband, Matt, snuck chocolate chips, danced, screamed, and celebrated when she was allowed to eat some dough. She celebrated again when she snuck more dough before I could stop her. The dog celebrated when Hailey flubbed her second attempt at dough thievery and it fell to the floor. Matt celebrated when he got to eat some dough. My son, Mason, celebrated when he got to eat some dough. I celebrated when I got to LICK THE BEATER. That is how you assert your dominance in any family dynamic. Thee who licks the beater, is the leader (say it like it rhymes).

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Then we went to do chores it the backyard. Mason mowed the lawn, meaning he pushed it forward twice and pulled it backwards once. He immediately asked if he earned his dollar and handed the job off to Matt. He and Hailey then filled a bucket with water and pretended it was an ice cream shop. They then tortured each other with the cold water from the hose.

Ahh, precious family memories.

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We went inside for a snack and to snuggle on the couch.

We left the kids alone in the living room for about 15 seconds and the darned pencil made an appearance again. Someone let out a war scream, someone let out a regular scream. Mommy needed to be quarantined with ice cream. Everyone had to go take a break in the bedroom. That is when we decided to hang up the massive amounts of colorings on Mason’s walls. Remind me to show you the rainbow that looks oddly like female anatomy, later… not here. Then we all went to bed.

Anyway, look, I have no idea what to say. All I can think right now is the stress shouldn’t be shown to my children. I am trying to focus on real interactions, real laughter, and real memories. This is a terrifying time for me and loving on my family helps. Maybe it will help you, too.

-Jenny

In COVID-19, Journal

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