Paris people

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Still have some pictures left from last year’s summer holiday in France... On the way home from the Dordogne area, we and our friends stopped over in Paris on our train journey home, which actually was the stupidest idea ever. We’d just had 12 really chill days in the countryside, but then finished the holiday off with all the other tourists cramming the capital, just missing the hottest day ever recorded by 24hrs (+42,5 celsius/108,5F!!). Looking at these pictures now, they’ve taken on a different meaning, and made me for the first time miss the world before. To be able to travel to other places, or just simply hang out with friends by the river, or stopping somewhere for a good cup of coffee is not something we take for granted now, is it?

Oomoo had to (as part of his extracurricular homeschooling he does with two classmates, in lessons set up by the parents) write himself a letter from now, to when he started his school year six months ago. A letter from the future in other words. It’s very funny but also sad, and gives perspective on what we’ve just had to accept as our reality now. Imagine telling yourself back then that there would soon be a worldwide pandemic that would stop the world functioning from how you always known it. That hundreds of thousands of people would die from the disease, and in order to stem the spread, most countries would have to go into lockdown for months, and that you wouldn’t be able to see your extended family or friends. That you’d have to queue to buy food in the supermarket, and that for the first two weeks of locking down, the shelves would be mostly empty. That you would have to stay at home, but you were allowed out once a day (if you were lucky enough to live in a country that would let you), as long as you kept moving. The strange thing is, it turns out you won’t mind it, and that you’ll be happy enough to be slightly wary of society opening up again. That the time in isolation was like a well needed pause, with time for you to think about what or who actually is important in your life, which in itself means that you’re a lucky so-and-so to be able to sit there and ponder over it in the first place. That going into lockdown was relatively easy, but you know that what comes after is going to be harder, and weirder. So you might have to tell yourself it’s always darkest before dawn. That there surely will be a silver lining, and that this too shall pass. Cheesy, I know, but it’s the truth Ruth.

Strange days

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Hello peeps. How you doin’? All good here; everyone is in good health and spirits, going into week 5 of the lockdown. It’s a strange time for sure, but it’s also strange how quickly one adapts to what is now our new everyday life. We are of course very lucky to live how and where we live, and so we feel grateful for what feels like a pause. And again, I stress how lucky we are to just be able to feel that we’re on pause, and not losing family members or our livelihood (not yet anyway for the latter, but that will hit hard once society opens up again, but there’s no point in worrying about it yet, as there’re nothing that can be done about it). It’s all so surreal, and equally surreal is how strange life just a few months ago seems, and how we just took it for granted. So, looking at these pictures from our summer holidays in France last year now feels like 10 years ago, from a bygone era where holidays were not an abstract concept like it feels like now. These were taken in the neighbouring villages to where we were staying, and weirdly that same feeling of being on holiday is where we are at now, but knowing full well of the nightmare that is going on at the same time out there. Strange days indeed.

Just read this blog post on the Modern House Journal, and I think it perfectly sums up what I’m feeling right now.

Painting with the moon

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Aaahhh, the magic that is light painting with a camera, but this time with a twist! Using the moon as the light - yeeeeeah! So, back in the summer (when we were in France), after having put the kids to bed, we stayed out on the terrace, chatting away in the moonlight. I wondered what would happen if you tried to do a light painting with the moon, and this is the result. Mr Famapa had way better skills, and could actually draw proper things, where as I went for the more abstract style. There’s a super moon on Wednesday, so look out for it!

I capture the castle ;)

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I’m going to be switching between current pics and catch ups from now on - I’m sure you don’t mind. So, let’s continue with pics from last year’s France trip in the summer. After our visit to the Marqueyssac gardens, we drove the 10 mins down the road to Chateau de Castlenaud, which was perfect, as the gardens were definitely more of a thing for the mamas. At the chateau there were trebuchets, armour and weapons to have a look at, and facts to learn about the castle itself and what life was like back then. I wonder if they ever stood waving at their own shadows too?

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A trebuchet and the top of the castle. And a very blue French sky.

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I spotted these birds perched on a ledge, and I was myself kind of hanging out of one as I took this, thinking that it would be so stupid to fall to my death taking this. I was hoping I might catch one of them in mid-flight, but no luck.

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Window filter.

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Taking it all in.

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And finally, a beautiful evening sky on the drive home. The boys sat in the back listening to an audio book while we all gazed at the changing colours and the night creeping in. Seems so long ago now.