I'm hoping that our downtown area only continues to attract more and more young families to it and that it'll continue to grow. And that one day, we can live within walking distance to it all, and I can have the best of all worlds: the people and pace of a downtown area, my family, and driving distance to the beach. It's been a struggle finding my sense of home, when my heart is stuck in the battle of up north vs here, but really, my heart is wherever my family is, and as long as I have them, I'm home.
8/28/13
Finding home, wherever you are.
Tampa. I love it. I do. But if I was to be 100% honest with you, I'd have to also admit that a part of my heart is still 1,128 miles north of here (according to Google, not my own calculations, I would've guessed it to be over 3,000, "salute, Bonjour, ay Canada) in NYC. I miss the people up there, the strangers that I talked to on the daily, the coffee shops and pastry shops and never ending sidewalks filled with some of humanities finest and funniest (and drunkest if you're walking on the sidewalks of the East Village). Whenever I start missing this, I drive downtown. Our skyscrapers are growing in numbers down here as more and more restaurants, museums, etc are opening up their doors to the community. I priced a few, because really, why not. I could give up a backyard, easily, if it meant being in the middle of people and things to do all day. Which is weird, because when we first left NYC, all I wanted was a backyard for my kid(s)...now....meh. We'll see. I took my boy out to the Glazer Museum this weekend, but we only played around inside of it for about an hour because it was such a beautiful day outside. We walked over to Curtis Hixon Park, which is right next to the museum, where we had a picnic on the Hillsborough River, watched the boats pass by, and chased some dirty birds, which thankfully, were never caught.
Found this little gem of a coffee shop too and was approached by 7 (yes, I really counted, I'm kind of like Rain Man sometimes with numbers) different people within the shop and on the streets about my curly haired son. "He's so cute!" "I LOVE his hair!" "Those eyes, beautiful, just like his mom!" and my personal favorite, "Need a daddy for that boy?" And just like that, it was like I was back in NYC, where inappropriateness isn't an issue, it's the norm. I laughed. It felt....like home. Whenever NYC and Tampa collide like that, it makes me happy.
8/25/13
Passes and Going Home
Parenting. Not easy. It's not difficult in the "oh man, how do I solve this Algebra problem, cook the perfect turducken, or solve world hunger" kind of way, more-so in the "how can I trick this thing into eating cheese puffs instead of following me into the bathroom because holyword do I need just 2 minutes alone without a sticky little (blessing from God) hand on me." My days are best described as equal parts love, manipulation, and naps. But something that also helps? Having passes to go to places that will aid in the entertainment of your child. I have passes to the Zoo, the Aquarium, and MOSI, which are all awesome, and now, thanks to my mom, I am also a pass holder at the Glazer Children's Museum in downtown Tampa. A museum in my favorite area of town, that connects to an amazing library with an awesome children's section, and that is also within walking distance of my favorite long, bay-front sidewalk for exercising on? Yes. Please. Thank you, Mom!
| Turtle love at the zoo last week |
| Glazer Children's Museum sandbox this weekend. |
| Adirondack Chairs for me to "actively watch my child learn and play" from, with a view of downtown. |
After the museum, we drove my mom past her childhood home in South Tampa. I have a few scattered memories of visiting my grandpa here in this home before he passed from Cancer. It's still standing, though all but just a tiny handful of the original homes in his neighborhood have long since been knocked down to make room for the McMansions that this area so close to Bayshore Blvd is known for. My grandpa was a small business owner of a sewing shop just off of Kennedy Blvd. I can still remember going into his shop with my sister and looking for buttons and glittery things all over his shop floors (meaning I would find them all, then my sister would order me to hand them all over to her. I think this was because she loved me). My mom told me a story this weekend that I had never heard before. She said that my grandpa loved to go to flea markets, and once while there, he bought my sister and I each feathery pins to attach to our book-bags for the first day back to school. We loved them and brought them out that night to a back-to-school skating event hosted by our church. While showing them off, another parent approached my mom and asked her why her daughters were wearing roach clips....whoops. Weed accessories are the new black? Harold Martin. He was a good man. Hardworking. Gone way too soon.
| Former Martin Residence |
8/24/13
8/18/13
Classic
| Sleepy little downtown |
| I want this car more than I want real pants. But really, I secretly long for an old 50's (Red) Chevy Truck. One day.... |
| Finally, these playas, playing on. |
8/14/13
Random
Brother went back to Seattle, but not before I got these sweet shots of his jean on jean on jeanness.
The Stepdad was ordained this past weekend as a Chaplain. After serving as a "Full-Bird" Colonel in the US Marines, he is now retiring his badges and serving the Lord, praying over and with those who are in their darkest hours. His service was a sweet one.
Also spent several days this week "over the bridge" (at the beach, visiting a gf who just had a sweet baby, and then today in Downtown, ST Pete). My gas tank/wallet hates me. But it's just so nice on the other side.....
| Beautiful Banyan Tree |
| The Hooker Tea Company: (The two missing containers on the shelf are due to my order of two different blended together/brewed leaves, ova ice. Igetwhadiwant). |
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