When I started blogging five years ago, I frequently wrote about my
experiences at work. Or family life. Or
something I saw and wanted to comment about.
I used a photo to illustrate the blog and that was it. Ever since I started, I
have always hoped that my words would make my readers think and relate what I have
said to things in their own lives…
A little more than a year ago, I started scrapbooking
again. Things have changed in the
scrapbooking world: it’s not just about photos cut into cute shapes and lots of
stickers to decorate the page. Somewhere
along the line, people figured out that pasting photos on a page wasn’t
enough. And cutesy stickers didn’t add
much to the story of when, why, and where the photo was taken.
And so, scrapbooking (in whatever form you choose) has
become a method of telling our stories about our lives, our families, and our
adventures. Photos are accompanied by “journaling
cards” that recount what happened, or was going on, in each photo. Sure, there are still stickers and other
ephemera but they are an adjunct to the story, and a small one at that.
Currently, I am doing Project Life for the second year in a
row. It’s a system of telling our
stories in an easy-to-do format, with pockets for photos and other souvenirs of everyday life. Becky Higgins
What I like about Project Life is that it makes me focus on
today. Sure, yesterday and tomorrow
were, or will be; important in their own time, but today is what I have right
now. In other words, I live in the
moment, recording life’s ups and downs as they happen. The only thing better than living in the
moment is being able to go back and look at those moments later…
My just-completed first page from last week. |
And my second page from last week. |
I bought in to the project, literally, and purchased a “core
kit” from Becky Higgins. This year, I
have been making some of my own journaling cards to add to the core kit. I want to personalize my story, after all, as
I am the only me around…
A few of the journaling cards I have made... |
Whether the photos show snow-capped mountains or mountains
of laundry in front of the washer, there is a story there. Not a what-I-did-last-summer
story but the story of everyday….. And that is what matters: telling our
stories.
So, though the format and content of my blog may seem
different, it really isn’t. I am still
focused on telling my own story but I am using several modalities and not just
writing. The important thing is that,
someday, someone who knew me and loved me will have a better glimpse of who I
was and what I did.
That’s telling my story…
Cali