A Winter Memory

It's been chilly here in Texas. As I type this, I have fuzzy white slippers on my feet and a mug of hot broth on the coffee table. I used to think that everywhere south of North Carolina was tropical all year round. No lie, until two years ago I legitimately believed that if you folded the US in half lengthwise, it'd be like Costa Rica on the bottom all the time. I definitely learned the hard way that this is not the case as we were camping around Mississippi in our Airstream, December 2013, with frozen pipes and icicles hanging off our bumpers (and noses). 

Texas has winter. And this time of year always makes me nostalgic and a bit more weepy than usual. I miss people a lot in the winter, and spend more time than I should wishing time would slow down. 

I scribbled the following memory the other night in the bathtub, my journal pages soggy at the corners from skimming the bubbles as I wrote. It's kind of sad, but it's winter after all, and plus I promised myself I'd show up with my words this year. That I'd just write, and not think; which is ten thousand times harder than it sounds. 

Hopefully as I keep writing and sharing, I won't have to write these little intros. Because I've never been a girl who likes to explain herself, and plus this just feels weird. But this is new so I'll be gentle with the transition. 

Here we go:

The day my grandfather died I didn’t cry. Which is like saying the sun didn’t rise. I cry watching QVC when the old ladies talk about their late husbands. I cry reading fortunes from chinese food takeout. One time I cried so hard from a greeting card, I jumped into the bathtub with all of my clothes on to hug my daughter who was two at the time.

But on this day, that heavy rush I am so familiar with, never rose up in my chest.

I have no memory of driving to the hospital or who was with me. I have absolutely no concept of when, on the large scale timeline of my life, any of it happened. I just know that in the waiting room, there was an overtired little boy who had the worst crusty nose I had ever seen. I remember I kept looking at him wondering how he was breathing through his nostrils, and wanting so badly to put him in a hot bubble bath. At one point he hit his mom hard in the leg and I judged her. I don’t know if it was cold or raining outside, but I know that when I looked out the window, I saw my aunt hiding way off in the distance sneaking a cigarette in the bushes and I kept thinking how funny it would be if her bouffant caught on fire while she was out there, and then she’d have to come back in with some crazy story about how she was now partially bald.

I must have had a baby with me, (Braedon) because I remember putting the baby down by my grandfather’s side and seeing him smile. There was this big clear plastic cup filling with brown liquid and the nurses told me the color meant it was getting close.

I picked my baby back up.

Just before it was time to leave, I asked if it was OK for me to be alone with him. Everyone said it was fine and before I knew it, it was just me, an untouched hospital meal tray, and the smell of stale urine.

He wasn’t wearing underwear and I was worried I might accidentally see his penis. His teeth weren’t in. His face was stubbly. I was very concerned that he wouldn’t want to be seen this way. He wore the exact same pants and shirt every single day for my entire life. The same belt and shoes, too and woke up at 5:00 every morning to shower and shave. Saggy sweaty balls and full gums on display is, I’m sure, not how he wanted to go out. But I had seen enough men dying to know this is kind of how it is, and you just have to make a deal with yourself that you won’t remember them this way. But you do, and that’s OK, too.

This grandfather was my Dad’s dad, and his wife signed each Birthday card, “Your adopted grandparents.” There was no blood relation, and she never let me forget it. But my grandfather seemed to hug me just as tight as the other kids in the family. He seemed to tell me the same jokes and stories as the others, too. He never made me feel like his favorite, but he never made me feel like the ugly stepchild, and I wanted to thank him for that before it was too late.

I remember thinking I wanted to put my cheek against his, and then getting close enough to smell his breath and changing my mind. His mouth was super dry but he was sleeping and minutes from dying, so I didn’t think offering up some fresh ice chips was in order. I felt bad that he felt thirsty. I felt bad that he’d never drink water ever again.

I sat in the chair next to his side, and buried my face in the crook of his elbow. All hospital sheets smell and feel exactly the same across the country and I instantly wanted to find the softest comforter in the world and wrap him in that, instead. Who wants to take their last breaths on a set of starchy 5 thread counts? I pressed my forehead into his arm, and took a few deep breaths. I bet he missed his bedroom. I bet he would have given anything to wake up to the alarm beeping, 55 year ago, on any given Monday. I bet he would have paid every penny he ever made in his entire life just to walk sleepily down the hall, trying to find the lightswitch on the wall. I bet it’s the simple things like that that will hurt the most when it’s time for me to go. The sound of my children still sleeping in their beds. The creek of the refrigerator door.

I had never snuggled him before, and it felt good that it wasn’t awkward. I could love him in my way, and there was nothing to be embarrassed of. Death has a way of cutting out all of the bullshit.

I spoke out loud, telling him how grateful I was for him accepting me into the family. I tried to look really hard at his face and memorize his wrinkles and hair and there was this one mole I kept fixating on near his left temple. I told him I was sorry I never noticed his mole before.

I remember holding his hand after standing up to leave, and seeing he still had his wedding ring on. His fingers were swollen so much that the top and bottom of the ring were completely covered in what looked like overripe grapes about to burst. I once saw a giant oak whose bark grew around the bolts that had been nailed into it. They were there to hold a tree swing, but the swing was long gone. That’s how his ring looked to me. Like that giant tree refusing to ever let go.

I am sure they had to cut the ring just to get it off. Or, now that I think about it, maybe they let him be buried with it still on. Maybe slowly, as his body decomposed in the ground, the ring loosened it’s grip and eventually just fell down to the bottom of the casket.

I wonder if you listen closely at a cemetery, maybe on a really slow day with no cars going by, you can hear the sound of rings dropping like that, one at a time.   

Bracing for Impact

Anxiety is a motherfucker. From the second my eyes open to the moment they close, I am on high alert. Flying debris from storms now fast asleep, shrapnel from bombs whose deployment echoes can no longer be heard. The disasters are long over, and yet, I am still hugging my body holding tight to my own knobby elbows, still looking in all directions for incoming danger to knock me clear off my feet. 

Somedays it's better than others, but when I write, oh, when I write, it is stronger than ever. I feverishly get the words on the screen, slam closed my laptop and then curl up on my bed.

Bracing for impact. 

I'm ready for the daggers to be thrown. For the witch hunters to jump online and rip me limb from limb. They have before. And they still do. And when I write I am always acutely aware of the consequences, both imaginary and true. And so I cover my head and hold my breath. I close my eyes tight, tighter, and wait for it to all come crashing down. 

Each time I sit to spill truth from my bones, I weigh the potential aftermath against the potential agony of keeping it bottled up, like someone reading the side effects from the sticker label on a new prescription.

Is it worth it? 

The words I shared a few days ago about my feelings around social media struck a nerve. Some people got super defensive and put words in my mouth that do not belong there. I did not say that love and joy is wrong, and we should only share darkness. I did not say that everyone should share all the private secrets in their closets. I could go on but the words I did write are already there and speak for themselves.

My post was about how I feel. I sometimes wish I was someone who thought sharing super posed airbrushed photos of your children were awesome. I swear I do! But I am not. Someone sent me a few screenshots of the accounts whose feathers were extra ruffled and I'm just over here like, "Oh my gosh, OF COURSE these people are pissed off. Duh!" 

Here's the thing. I shared my truth. I shared my feelings. I will continue to do that. You can't tell me I'm wrong because these are my emotions, and my emotions aren't wrong. They are what they are and I am who I am. 

If other people want to share their truths and their feelings, they are fully allowed to! You want to write a blog post about how much you love instagram and how important hashtaging and only sharing the best 1% of your day is? Listen, go for it! I'll high five you the whole way.

But I can only be me. I wish I was you, and you, and you, and especially you with the perfect hair at 8:00am, but I'm not. I will always be more Kelly Cutrone than Marry Poppins. 

I'm sorry if this blog post is choppy and fragmented. I am doing my best to pull together words for things that really don't have linguistic applications. Fear. Guilt. Insecurity. Doubt. Rejection. I'm not sure there is any verbiage that could ever really give them due process. But I'm trying. And here's why. Here is what I want this post to really be about. 

Yesterday, the hate didn't come raining down upon my head. Sure a few people were pissed, but my goodness hundreds and hundreds of people were not. I have never in my life gotten so many emails, and messages, and letters of pure vulnerable beauty. I took the medicine down the hatch and expected the absolute worst, and instead the opposite happened. 

You nodded your heads in agreement. You wrote the kindest words. And even when you disagreed with what I had to say, you were eloquent and well spoken and reflective. And as my bestie (the same one who got me the awesome t-shirt for Christmas) said so beautifully in a text yesterday afternoon, "Girl, you took your sweater off and a whole gigantic tribe wrapped their arms around you to keep you warm." 

And so here I am saying thank you. Here I am because in all honesty Lily is still on school vacation, and I don't have time to shave my armpits or make anything other than cereal for breakfast let alone email all of you back, but I am really grateful and I want you to know that. It's important for me that you know that. 

Every word you have written to me has been read. 

And I also want to share that writing is fucking terrifying for me. Like it's the best and the worst at the exact same time. And I know I'm not alone in that. And so I want to share this tonight to say thanks but to also hopefully grant someone else the courage to spit their truth out there. To let them/you know that even when you think everything is going to crumble and crash, and fuck it even if it does, it is still always, always worth it. 

You won't love everything I have to say. You won't ooh and ahh over every photograph I share. My inbox will not be flooded every time I hit publish. 

But I have the courage to change the things I can, one word/photo/clay bowl/knitted mitten/pot of broth at a time, and next time and the time after that, maybe, thanks to all of your loving support, the looming impact won't seem so fatal. 

Thank you for that. Truly. I am grateful. 

I am clinging to two quotes today. One is from an old scrap of paper from a writing conference I went to in 2003:

Write like a motherfucker. Write like everyone around you is dead.

And the second is by a fabulous poet, John Trudell:

I'm just a human being trying to make it in a world that is very rapidly losing its understanding of being human.

Thank you for letting me be human. And for being human in return. And for letting me say the things out loud that I've too long kept silent. 

It never occurred to me that the impact I was bracing for would be an enormous hug. Imagine that. 







All In

It's a tricky thing when your business is your name. Michelle Gardella, Photography. 

I'm not sure if this trickiness applies to all professions, but so far, I haven't seen my dentist or my mechanic sweating over their online presence. 

Here's the thing though, photographers, for whatever reason, from what I have seen, feel the need to create a brand that is all encompassing. Maybe it's because of the path that celeb photographers have paved, or maybe it's because the algorithm for getting lots of followers and likes on instagram is so simple and predictable and safe... I honestly have no clue why. But the truth is, very few photographers show up as themselves in the world anymore. They, we, are so entangled in this super charged, super pure, super happy version of what we think we need to be, that we forget the beauty of who we really are. 

I was planning on jumping back on instagram this month after taking December off. But I'm realizing a lot of my issue with instagram is around the fact that my bullshit meter doesn't stop going off as soon as I scroll through my feed. And I get it. Like I can see how everyone is so hungry for work and accolades that they'll only post sunset photos of their children dancing with ducks or their own hair blowing wildly in the wind. But the reality is, their marriage is in shambles and they drink themselves to sleep most nights. They are in debt and desperate for ten dollars. They are hiding their sexuality to the point of extreme depression. They are living with their parents because they can't afford rent. I could go on. I know these people behind the curtains, and I love them for who they are, and they aren't giving anyone the full, beautiful story, they could be. People are like, why would anyone share the darkness when the world needs so much light? And I'm just like, why is reality dark? It's not. We've just got it all wrong. Reality is where it's at. 

I promise you, I fully understand the way this branding machine works. For most of us, we aren't making giant sums of money in this industry. Sure we aren't starving, but we aren't raking it in, and we certainly have no clue if the money will keep coming. So, out of fear, we brand the heck out of ourselves in the hopes that it will sell more. Sell more sessions, sell more seats at our retreats, sell more prints. Get more likes which will get more followers which will somehow and in someway fill up the holes in our hearts that we as artists all have. We tell the kids to stop fidgeting, we tell our husbands to shift into the good light, and we sell. Oh boy, do we sell. 

But I just can't do it anymore. I can't use myself or my children as tiny characters in a never-ending organic tea commercial. We aren't that.

This weekend I took Lily to meet a mermaid at a strip mall aquarium. The moment you open the door the smell of rotten fish and shark poop nails you between the eyes, and I am not lying when I say that I got some water from the koi pond in my eyes and they burned for a good ten  minutes. This place was top ten grimiest I have ever been. But she wanted to meet a mermaid, so there we were. And as we were walking around, someone stopped me. "I know you from instagram," she said. "I recognize Lily," she said. "I'm from New Jersey but here in Austin visiting my sister. It's SO COOL to run into you!" It was so cool, but all I kept thinking was, "Oh my god, here I am in this disgusting place wearing kind of baggy yoga leggings with mismatched socks and running sneakers, and I let Lily dress herself and she looks like she's about to star in the Ice Capades cira 1986 with chocolate on her chin because that's the only way I got her to not wear rhinestone high heels." And then I felt a huge bolt of shame wash through me, as this woman walked away, because in real life, we aren't as awesome as we are on instagram. I felt shame for being real life us. And FUCK THAT. 

We spend the weekends in our pajamas and play poker all day with bets like, "Loser has to toilet wand the boy's bathroom." We buy our clothes at thrift shops and have no clue what's on trend. Seriously. No idea. Thomas and I fight and slam doors. Lily cries because she doesn't like the way three quarter length sleeves feel inside a winter jacket. Braedon has to eat frozen Udi's lasagna before bed because the boy consumes more food than anyone I have ever seen in my life and I just can't keep up with the cooking. And I'm a hot mess in the middle of OCD treatment, walking around repeating, "You are safe, you are loved," in my brain just to eat a cucumber slice from the salad bar at Whole Foods. Listen, I'm not saying we are doomsday over here! We are awesome and funny and filled to the brim with the kind of imperfect love that people long for on their death beds. I really believe that. BUT, we are so far from mountain top hipster poses and the things that really reel people in. We are so, so far from the things that get features and followers and fans. You won't see a photo of last night's apartment building driveway session of Kan Jam on Artifact Uprising anytime soon. Even though it was fucking brilliant and awesome and I accidentally hit the drain pipe at full speed like ten times and made my kids laugh so hard they got the hiccups.  

And yesterday morning, while Thomas was at men's over 30 soccer and B was at his friend's house shooting rats with a pellet gun, and Lily was in the bath because she had a bit of trouble wiping herself when she went #2, I was cleaning the house and accidentally called 911 while bleach-wiping our home phone in the living room. The sheriff came and I answered the door with a side ponytail in my hair and a vacuum still running in my right hand, wearing a t-shirt that says, "Gangsta Wrappa," with a present on it that my bestie got me for Christmas. When he held his hip and asked, "Is there a problem, ma'am," it took EVERYTHING in me not to burst out laughing and declare, "Officer, you have NO IDEA!" You know you have OCD when you call 911 due to scrubbing every number on your telephone in a corner of the room. HA! That's the type of shit that happens around here all the time. We're like a comedy show only it's not a comedy show and sometimes I cry in the bathtub with the door locked. 

And so I'm left with this dilemma of like, as a business woman, do I play along? As a business woman who has two kids in private school and needs to make money, do I find some dope Emerson quotes (or even better, bible ones!) and splash them across a more marketable version of my family? 

The answer, is no. No I do not. No I will not. 

For me, it is not a choice. For me, as a Mother, I cannot ask my awesome kids to participate in a false reflection of our reality. It's like wearing an itchy wool sweater for me. Posting a tiny utopian sliver of our lives isn't fair and when things aren't fair I can't just sit there and feel all itchy and uncomfortable. I'm the girl who would rather take off the sweater and be naked in the cold than feel confined by self inflicted discomfort for five minutes. 

Also, I have a super uneasy feeling about strangers staring at my children. I get super weirded out picturing a bunch of people getting to know their faces and freckles and favorite ice cream flavors. That's probably my anxiety stuff, but either way, it gives me the willies. 

I have hesitated to write this because, while I have become quite the expert at it, I don't actually enjoy burning bridges anymore. I don't want to hurt people's feelings who love to play the game. Because if you love it, then that's all that matters. But I don't have to love it. And I don't have to love going onto my phone and seeing you do what I consider to be lying just for the sake of money. I am an opinionated woman and I speak the truth of my heart, and that's the truth. So if and when I do return to instagram, I think maybe I'll only follow Thomas and Braedon. Because when I walk through the mall, and people jump out and try and sell me their glamorous hair and nail creams or whatever, I get really mad. Like more mad than I think I should because I like my hair and nails just fine thankyouverymuch. And instagram feels like that a lot lately. Like nonstop people selling me things. And me selling things. And everyone selling all of the things all of the time. 

I love being your friend in real life, but I feel that seeing how much bullshit you spit on social media might interfere with our friendship. So I won't look. I'm not going to look anymore because I love you and I don't want to judge you, I just can't help it. Also, it makes me jealous of your pretend reality. Like why can't my pretend reality be as good as your pretend reality? And that's a whole different level of weird industry stuff that I can't even begin to wrap my head and heart around. 

When my little family plays poker, I'm always the one to go all in. I'm always the one to play with a "Fuck it! Let's do this!" attitude and my son always says, every single time, if you were playing with actual money, I bet you wouldn't be so fearless. 

But what he doesn't realize is that I have gone all in my entire life, especially with my photography business. Do I sometimes wish I was not this way? Omg you seriously have no idea. I have wished myself into the grave on so many nights. But at the end of the day I am Michelle Gardella. And Michelle Gardella goes all-in with 100% of her beating heart and then lets the cards play out. "I might go broke," I think, "But at least I'll be happy." So far I'm still in the game. I'm still alive. I haven't gone broke. I've come close. But I'm still here. 

(Is it hard to say that last paragraph out loud? Yes. But I just got finished with a month-long love yourself club where we all had to email a list of 10 things we loved about ourselves to one another over and over again until it didn't feel so weird. I can list ten million things I hate about myself, but saying a few things that I am proud of, GULP. But whatever, that last paragraph stays because it's true. And because maybe it will help someone.)

And so I think the reason I needed to get all of this out this morning is because I really want to start writing more personal things on this blog, and perhaps instagram, and sharing recipes and real life stories and things that will never ever sell anything. Photos that have nothing to do with weddings or rivers. Thoughts, disjointed but brave. And I guess I just need to acknowledge before that shift happens, that it's OK to show up in the world and not be trying to make a buck. It's OK to write because you have to write or photograph because you have to photograph, and let that be that. It's OK to create to save your life. 

It's a tricky thing when your business is your name, but I think, I hope, it will be less tricky as I allow myself to just be me. Not Michelle the business woman, but just, Michelle. I have no clue if this will be the end of the road for my business. If not playing the hashtag-desperate for likes-only post what relates to your brand-game will be the final straw. 

But I've already taken the sweater off. It's the only way I know how to do it, and I like my odds.  

There's a voice in my head that screams at me, every single time I write, "Nobody cares, Michelle. Just shut up, Michelle. You've already said this before, Michelle. Just play along." But every time I share my voice publicly, a few things are happening. One, I am peeling back another layer of the emotional onion and feeling one tiny bit lighter. Two, I am facing my fears and telling the bully voices to be quiet. And three, I am granting myself permission to exist as a totally imperfect human being. To show up in the world exactly as I am and not be invisible. So it's worth it, I think. And I'm looking forward to whatever unfolds next. 

 

 

Thoughts on a Monday Morning

I'm awake at 4:29am eating raspberries from the carton, listening to the wind howl outside my window. We live in a tiny apartment in a big complex and the wind likes to whistle, loud, in the space between buildings. As it was waking me up tonight, in my dream it was a small boy wearing rolled up overalls, running with a pinwheel to the sky, somewhere far away like maybe France. 

I woke up and realized all of our patio chairs were knocked into a tangled heap in one corner. 

Sometimes I can go right back to sleep when I wake up, but usually my brain is too busy. Tonight I instantly began worrying about Lily and feeling horrible for not being enough like Martha Stewart or Joan Cleaver. They don't wear giant pilly sweatshirts with pajama pants when running to Target on Christmas Eve at 10:24pm. They don't say fuck or take naps. 

So, I began really beating myself up about this, and wondering how, in 2016, I could try and be 'better'. I could shower each morning and blow dry my hair. I could get jewelry to dress up my uniform white t-shirt over yoga pants. I could wear blush and mascara. I could bake more and whistle while I work. 

This isn't the first time I've tried to fit into this mold. After having Braedon almost 14 years ago, I bought pearl earrings and a pearl necklace and hung an apron beside the pantry. I've gotten a lot better since then with the whole self acceptance thing, but the Holidays always bring it all boiling right back up to the surface. 

Those moms don't read gossip blogs. Those moms can eat so much gluten. 

In these moments, where I'm alone and it's all whipping through me, there is only one thing that brings me back to center. 

In a society that would love to have me stand up straight and gloss my lips, instead, I am an artist. 

This means it makes sense that I am always hunched over the wheel covered in clay or my clothes smell like river mud or both. It makes sense that I feel all of the things all of the time and have ten (hundred) times more wrinkles framing my face than anyone else my age. It makes sense that my hair is always in a total shit show bun on top of my head and I can't be bothered with things like manicures or marzipan. 

I don't think there is only one way to be an artist, but I think I only make sense when I grant myself permission to be the artist that I am. I bet if we were living in the super olden days, in a tiny village where everyone has a role like in the movies, I'd be the one with a dusty face selling pottery at the market, writing invisible poems on my palm with my pointer finger between customers. I'd be the one bathing in the river with my family while the others are all at church wearing pantyhose, telling their children to hush.  

And that is OK. 

There isn't only one way to be a (successful) woman in this world. 

I have a daughter and I think because of that, I have a responsibility to love myself. And that's kind of the hardest thing ever, sometimes. But I'm finding my way. 

I've shared so many honest details of my journey on this blog since I began in 2008, and now, with only three days until 2016, it feels important to get this out, as clumsy and knobby-kneed though it might be. 

This is going to be the year, not that I finally get my act together and start applying expensive skin creams (because that's not me), but, the year when I dedicate my heart to self love each day. 

As I am.

Just as I am. 

Ghost words scribbled across my skin, and all. 

I think it's gong to be a lot like cleaning my home. I get it all tidy and vacuumed and looking great, knowing full well that it will all be messy again. But that's OK. I'll keep washing the dishes and picking up the socks. There's beauty in the work of things, too, I think. 

I don't know how to end this, except to say that this far into it I know for certain that words are medicine and it doesn't matter how good they taste or how lovely the packaging, so long as you just get them down. 

And the same is true for photographs and porcelain bowls; poems and pearl stitches. I've learned that it doesn't matter if it's all horrible, as long as you just keep showing up and making the art, even if it's at 4 o'clock on a Monday morning, it all will make sense. Little by little, bird by bird, the wind always carries us home.  

 




BRIDES Magazine Features

There are many places to be featured in the wedding world nowadays. It seems every minute there's a new blog popping up. But there is one publication that has truly stood the test of time, Conde Nast's BRIDES. 

I have been featured in their pages many times, and every single time it warms my soul. Not because of my ego getting a boost, but because my photography is not what you'd expect to see in such a mainstream place. Seeing my moody black and white river photos in the mix represents, to me, that I was right to not compromise my vision from the start. 

The longest feature I've had in their pages was a lesbian, biracial, Jewish wedding. And you have no idea how happy this makes me. Darn right those stories deserve to be shared. 

Anyhow, I think a lot of photographers believe there's a formula to follow to be recognized or successful. If I do x, and edit like y, then I'll end up at point A, where I dream of being. And I guess that might work for some people, and that's awesome. But these BRIDES features always remind me that it's also perfectly OK to take your own way, and dance to your own beat, too. 

It's just a moment of validation for me, which, as any artist can attest to, feels kind of lovely.