Things I want to remember

Beads | SusannahConway.com

 

I try not to spoil him but I know I do. I spoil him with love, with my attention, with presents, yes, with presents, too. I can’t help it. I am just so honoured to be a part of his life. I feel so incredibly lucky to know him and be the recipient of his kisses and cuddles. I love cosying up on the sofa with him and scooping his little body into my lap and burying my nose in his hair. My love for this small human is tactile and deeply felt. I still get butterflies on the way to see him; I mope around the house the day I get home. It’s hard not seeing him every day, but when I’m there I am THERE, completely present, totally his.

 

emailing

 

The first morning I had to send an important email to a friend, so I perched on the bed with my laptop typing as quickly as I could. Noah wandered in and stood beside me, watching intently. “When I’m older I can write on the computer like you,” he said. “Yes you can,” I said, pressing send and closing the screen. An hour or so later my sister and I went looking for Noah only to find him sat on the bed with my laptop open, typing an “email”. I swear my heart exploded into a million pieces right there.

Watching him play with two of his little friends I understand how he is a particularly active child, shall we say. Always on the move. Always talking. Always peforming (my sister and I have vowed never to tell him to stop showing off.) He is a live wire, a shooting star, our very own Billy Elliot. He loves his princesses — Jasmine is his current favourite, though Ariel and Belle are close behind. Panda is his favourite soft toy, a furry friend he sleeps with each night, keeping him safe. He LOVES dressing up — Auntie Susie may have bought him a Merida dress at the weekend :) Our boy loves being a boy and he loves doing “girl” things, too — it’s all glorious fun to him and he inspires me to own who I am because he models it so well. Our little guru wearing sparkly leggings, pinging a bow and arrow around the room.

 

Teddy comes home with us

 

On Saturday I treated him to a teddy bear that’s as tall as him, and I said: “If you ever miss me and you feel sad then you can cuddle teddy and he will help you feel better until I come back.” I say these things and I never know if they register, his nearly-four-year-old attention flying from shiny object to TV screen to iPad to his princesses. But my sister told me he came home from nursery the day I left and declared he was missing me and hugged teddy. I nearly cried. I always make her tell me the things he says about me when I’m not there, my heartache-y auntie need to know he still loves me. And he does… he does :)

And good god, I love him so.

 

teddy bear

Something for the weekend

Natural History Museum | SusannahConway.com

[video] An evening with the delightful Ray Bradbury <— watch all of this, it’s so lovely

Much loved teddies (I still have my most beloved toy, Fluffy: a black cat my mum knitted when she was pregnant with me)

Vegan superfood hot chocolate | coconut black rice pudding | beet salad with lemon tahini

Two mindfulness apps I’m enjoying lately: Buddify | Omvana

Loving these desktop wallpapers

[video] Compilation of Wes Anderson’s slow motion shots (the train is my fave) | buying art for Steve Zissou

Color//colour with Xanthe & Andrea

How to create curvy text in Photoshop

Her world looks so dreamy

[video] I don’t know anything about this, but doesn’t it look great?

Happy weekend, loves! xo

The end of should

lines | SusannahConway.com
I am ready to let go of the shoulds.

I should wake up earlier. I should go to bed earlier. I should drink more water. I should eat less chocolate. I should exercise more. I should socialise more. I should get out the house more. I should phone my family more. I should stop obsessing about X. I should let go of Y. I should be happier. I should be more grateful. I should chill the fuck out. I should be more extroverted. I should blog more. I should do more marketing. I should organise my accounts better. I should learn how to do X. I should stop doing Y. I should be more brave. I should be less scared. I should be more optimistic. I should smile more. I should be less serious. I should look on the bright side. I should be more supportive. I should be less judgemental. I should be more responsible. I should be married by now. I should have kids by now. I should be less selfish. I should have more patience. I should wait and see. I should trust. I should believe. I should stop thinking about it. I should stop shoulding myself all the time.

Oh yeah, I’m so ready to let go of the shoulds. Should is a spectacularly unhelpful word and every time it enters my head — which is most of the time — I feel myself sink lower and lower. Should is the strict headmistress telling me what to do. Telling me how useless I am. Telling me I’m no good.

Well, sod that, I’ve had enough. I am ready to let go of the shoulds.

What are you ready to let go of?

Something for the weekend

Miracle sunset | SusannahConway.com

Can you imagine owning your own photobooth?

lol my thesis

The time travelling photographer (thanks, Helen)

27 things to leave behind in 2014

Meditation transforms roughest SF schools | David Lynch on using meditation as an anchor of creativity & integrity

This is rather cute

Kale + brussels sprouts salad | Immunity soup | quinoa kale pomegranate salad

The great Brooklyn house snooping of 1978

40 years of people on the Tube | vintage photos from Stars Wars set

[video] Interview with a two-year-old

Enjoy what’s left of the weekend, loves! x