Pictures Worth a Thousand Words

I take a lot of pictures, probably at least one every couple of days, if not every day some weeks. I take pictures to preserve a moment, a memory, something funny or cute, or something I might want to include in a blog post or share on Instagram.

Of course, not all pictures I take are worthy of keeping. I’ve gotten pretty good at going through my photos every two or three days and deleting ones that really aren’t very good. I tell myself I could have done better, or ask myself with if this image is something I truly want to remember, and why. I go over with myself why a particular photo is worth keeping and from there sometime it stays and other times it still might get deleted. I go through my entire photo file once a year to see if I still want to keep everything, and because of my earlier culling it’s rare that a photo gets deleted during this process.

Photos of family members and family events usually always make the cut, but not all of them. Pictures from our travels over the years have been gleaned, and I am satisfied with the ones that remain and the memories they provide.

There are a few pictures though I keep for a different reason.

The picture of our living room at the top of the page is one of them. I see this room every day, so why do I keep this picture? It was taken when we returned from our trip up to Massachusetts last September for WenYu’s wedding. We’d been away for seven days, and this was the view that greeting me when I walked in the door of our apartment. Something I’ve seen hundreds of time.

This time though the room spoke to me, and said You’re home! Come be comfortable again.

I took a picture of that moment. And nearly six months later I still feel the warmth of that homecoming whenever I look at the picture. I still feel the welcome and the comfort.

There are a couple of other photos that speak to me, although with emotions deeper than mere memory. I still feel the deep, jumbled emotions I had as we left Kauai in May 2022 in the picture of the coastline, taken from the plane window as we took off. What are we thinking leaving Hawaii? We are so happy there? The green light in the second photo was located by the woods at our first apartment in Tennessee. I saw it every time I went out for a walk and for some reason felt a deep chill every time I walked past it. That light was always on, day and night, and there were no other green lights at the complex. And no one at the complex knew why it was green or why it was there. Just the picture still gives me an unsettled feeling.

All the photos in my files are memories and moments caught in time. All are beloved, but these other ones are kept because they spoke to me in a different way, in voices I can still hear and feel.

8 responses to “Pictures Worth a Thousand Words”

  1. oistadlh Avatar
    oistadlh

    Laura, I made your Cake Delight recipe for Valentine’s Day dessert. It was amazing! Too much for us, so we shared with our neighbors who also loved it. We all thank you for this recipe!

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    1. Laura & Brett Avatar

      A whole cake is too much for us too these days, but it’s perfect for when family is here or for family birthdays. I still always take a BIG piece!

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  2. Laurel Hill Avatar
    Laurel Hill

    This brought to mind selling our last home during Covid. Basically, no one was allowed into others’ homes (great timing for a sale but our new condo was ready…), so our realtor asked me to create a walk through video. I still look at it from time to time just to remember that house as we had it. The buyer had plans, unbeknownst to us, to turn it into an Airbnb which broke my heart for about six months. But there is still a lot of joy in looking back at our pictures . And I’ve also taken photos of this home to share with an elderly relative who lives far away. It’s nice to feel that comfort of home, especially after a trip. My photos need a good editing, but I never seem to get to it. 😊

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    1. Laura & Brett Avatar

      I can imagine how you must have felt finding out your beautiful home was going to be used as an Airbnb. That information should be kept hidden from sellers IMO because it’s most likely going to hurt the seller. I’m glad you were able to put that behind you.

      I think the reason that photo of our living room speaks to me so clearly is that we finally have the furniture we always wanted, and everything just looks right and like home to us now. It’s perfect for us and so comfortable too.

      I am always surprised when I go into my photos after not looking at them for a while (I usually go through the more recent ones every week or so). The recent stuff sometimes startles me – Why did I take a picture of that? What was I thinking? Then, Why is that picture still here? I took a lesson from a professional photographer when we lived in Hawaii – she taught me to take lots of photos but then how to look clearly at them and judge them – ever since then I have had no qualms about letting pictures go. I’d rather have one good one that speaks to me than 5 or 10 so-so or bad photos. I still wish I was better at it all though.

      When our son was in the fifth grade we were living off-base in Japan in a typical Japanese house. For a class project he did a video about the house and filmed each room. The day Desert Storm began I wanted to tape the news and guess which tape I foolishly used? I could care less now about the day Desert Storm started but would give anything to see our Japanese home again (which was eventually torn down).

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      1. Laurel Hill Avatar
        Laurel Hill

        OH, that’s sad about taping over your house video. But what a great idea to digitize all your photos. I have SO many digital photos and randomly start deleting, but it gets tiring quickly. haha. I think my iMac has 15K, and I usually delete a couple hundred before I tire of the task. Or I get swept into looking at our travels, the grands when they were babies, etc. And now I have inherited a bin of physical photos from emptying my mom’s apt. She didn’t want any! And said she has her iPhone to look at photos anytime she wants. My intent is to go through them and send many to my siblings, discarding others that are blurry, aren’t anyone I know, etc. But they can certainly take over if you let them.

        Our former home as Airbnb is interesting. I can tell by the reviews that they aren’t keeping up the water system, the dishwasher needs replacing, and the giant gardens have been let go to weeds. But, as we say, we got the check and it’s not ours anymore. Onward and upward. 😊

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      2. Laura & Brett Avatar

        I still feel very angry with myself when I think of what I did to that video. But I understand. In the moment, when war is starting, and your husband is on the front line, you think that’s going to be the most important thing for ever so you better tape it. Nope. It happened, it’s over, he’s still alive and life goes on. And you wish you had that video of your house in Japan.

        I think Airbnb rentals have taken a real hit over the past few years, and people don’t rent them as often any more. So, maintenance has slowed down or stopped completely because it’s unaffordable and you can’t charge those ridiculously high “cleaning charges” any more. I’m more interested in what’s going on next door to our old house than the house itself – so much drama! Our former neighbor was constructing some sort of monstrosity; he overextended and then got foreclosed on and was evicted. The house was remodeled by the government (work was beautifully done) but before it could be sold it went into some sort of legal limbo for some reason. The former neighbor and family moved back in illegally, wired the electricity illegally, and then lived there for several more years (were doing so when we moved to Hawaii). They were eventually evicted again, but completely destroyed the interior when they left. Property was finally sold (as-is) to a builder who demolished it and is building four or five small homes on the large lot! Onward and upward, as you say!

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  3. M'Shell Avatar
    M’Shell

    I love taking pictures. When disposable cameras were big, I would save my money to develop the film and I’d put the pictures into photo albums. I still have most of these albums. Then when facebook came along and you could only add 25 pictures to an album, I’d have to curate the photos for that album. It was always fun to look back and decide what photos I wanted to choose. I’ve always wanted to be someone who scrapbooks but I just don’t have the patience to do it.

    I have so many photos on my phone now that it feel overwhelming. But every year for Christmas, I make a photo calendar for my Dad. It’s a great way to gather the top photos of the year. I buy a second copy of the calendar for our family and save them when the year is over and now use them as a yearly photo book. It’s not perfect but it is nice to have a selection of ‘top’ photos from that year in a hard copy.

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    1. Laura & Brett Avatar

      Brett and I had albums and boxes of photos, and bags and bags of negatives, and I made scrapbooks for the girls when they were little too. When we decided to move to Hawaii I knew it wouldn’t be a good idea to take all those photos along as they could get ruined there too easily by the humidity, etc. I paid Meiling to scan every page of the photo albums and all the boxes of prints – those live up on the cloud now. We burned all the negatives. The girls took their own scrapbooks home with them when they came to Hawaii for Christmas in 2021. The whole process was painful, but I’m so grateful now for the pictures on my phone – they are always there for me to look at, and of course they’re in Instagram and on all my blogs.

      Sometimes I remember a photo, but when I go to look for it I find that I deleted it sometime in the past. Sometimes. that makes me sad, but mostly I know it’s because I judged it to not be a very good picture (and it probably wasn’t). I love going through the photos I have now, especially the ones from our travels, and the iPhone has done a good job of rotating though photos every day – they’ve even kept ones that I deleted from my library!

      P.S. Scrapbooking, it turned out required far more money than patience for me. I just couldn’t justify the expense after a while even though I loved doing it.

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