Wednesday, December 31, 2008

Retrospective




Three hundred and sixty-five days later.

When I decided to take up the Project 365 challenge, there were almost a dozen of us on a local message board who joined up. The goal was to take a picture every day for an entire year and upload it to a photoblog.

Most of us didn't complete the project. Of the original group, I think only four of us are still posting regularly. None of us posted a picture every day. And we all went off in different directions. A few people chose or happened upon a specific theme, such as nature pictures or their pets, and uploaded several pictures per day. My theme was simple, I thought. I wanted to try to capture through little vignettes what was going on in my life. I wanted to stick to the rule that I had to find just one picture to summarize a day. I worried that it was going to be hard to find interesting things to shoot. Wasn't my life pretty routine? How interesting was it going to be if all my pictures were about my commute, work, dinner, TV, and bed? Could I be 'authentic' and still be interesting?

My life changed quite a bit more than I expected this year, and that routine went away when I lost my job. Even so, the life of the unemployed can be even more routine and dull. There were many days when I couldn't imagine taking another picture of my coffee shop or house or desk.

This project was supposed to get me in the habit of carrying a camera everywhere. I have a small digital camera, but I still didn't remember to take it with me. Most of my pictures came from my iPhone, which was convenient but didn't have particularly good image quality. There were several days where pictures I wanted to take were just unusable because of the lighting or motion.

I decided to use Apple's iWeb software, part of the iLife suite. It does upload pretty seamlessly to the mac.com (now me.com) website, but the site itself is not very good. I'm sorry about that. I thought I would get around to improving it or porting it to a dedicated photoblog site, but I never got around to it.

Although I didn't get a picture for every day of the year, I was pretty consistent. I was most diligent in January (29 days) and February (21 days). After that, my rate dropped off to 16 in March and stayed around there for the rest of the year. August was the highest with 18 pictures, and September was the lowest with 11.

2008 was not a happy year for me, and I think you can see that in the blog. I was already concerned about my job situation when the year started. My fears were justified when I was laid off at the end of February. Throughout the rest of the year, travel for job interviews is a recurring theme. One without a happy ending, so far, although I have had promising interviews that might lead to a good position. Unfortunately, it's likely to be a position out of state, so one set of troubles will end while another set starts.

As I looked back at the photos I took, I was surprised how well they told the story of the year. The one thing that may be missing is people. I tried to mostly make this about me and what I was seeing, so friends and even family (except for my daughter, who is too adorable not to be constantly photographing) rarely make appearances. It's also easier to pause to take out a camera and shoot something when I'm alone.

From January through March, the pictures are mostly little glimpses of things in my life - my car, my office, my coffee shop, my lunch, shopping, going to the dentist, and, because I live in Minnesota, a lot of snow. (This became a big theme in March, when it snowed nearly every day and the winter seemed endless.) In early January, we went on a cruise vacation, so there's a varied set of vacation pics. In February, we remodeled our bathroom, so the obligatory before and after shots show up. I also made my one great prediction in February, when I took a picture of a gas station that had a price of $2.95. The gas station owner had put "WOW" underneath it. I predicted that we would really see WOW in the summer. That certainly was true. Although gas is around $1.60/gallon now, it flirted with $4.00 for most of the summer.

Although I was officially laid off on February 27, there's not much mention of it early in the blog. I visited an employment lawyer to help me negotiate my severance on March 13, and on March 20, there's a picture of cocktail hour food from a professional networking session.

In April, there are a few pictures of things I was selling on eBay, both to raise cash and kill time. It took a while for my job search to heat up, and I spent a lot of time just hanging out at home. On April 30, I blogged my first college visit, in Florida. Over the summer, I was interviewing all the time, and my pictures came from Chicago, Seattle, Florida, New York, Denver, California, and different schools in Minnesota. I tried to be discreet about where I was going and who was interviewing me.

My youngest brother was married in August. We were all in the wedding, so several pictures from summer show some of our involvement - Ellen's haircut and dress, the bachelor's party. At the end of summer, my car was rear-ended by a semi. Fortunately, the insurance covered it completely and the body shop was able to repair it.

My daughter turned 3 in September. The pictures later in the year show her as a more active, engaged child than those early pictures. She looks so much more older and alert in the later pictures. It's really quite striking.

In October, there was an interview in D.C. that led to a consulting project. Several more pictures were taken in D.C. as I spent a few weeks there. Then, amidst pictures of fall leaves, there was another flurry of interviewing - California, Missouri, Newark, New York, and Baltimore. By the time snow had started flying again and we were at Hanukkah and Christmas celebrations, the interviewing season was quieting down and I was finding it hard, again, to figure out what to take pictures of.

As this year comes to a close, I've signed an extended consulting contract with that school in D.C. I'll be there again regularly over the next few months. There are some more interviews and trips on my horizon, and hopefully, one will lead to the right job. I guess I miss that boring routine I was worried about - commute, work, home, sleep. Right now, that sounds pretty nice.

I haven't decided if I'm going to continue this photoblog. If I do, I will definitely want to move it to a more robust website, and possibly re-create the past entries to be easier to navigate.

As I said, 2008 was not a happy year. (That seems to be true for a lot of people in this country.) I am glad that I undertook this project and was able to finish it. Perhaps I'll photoblog 2009, in the hope that I will be able to tell a positive story with those pictures.

If you have read all of this and looked at some of my photos, please leave a comment below. And thanks for coming along for the ride.

Tuesday, December 30, 2008

Record


This is supposedly Minnesota's snowiest December since 1909. Go us!

Friday, December 26, 2008

Candlelight


Ellen and a friend color together under the light of the menorahs.

Wednesday, December 24, 2008

Drool


My friend Scott made this amazing beef Wellington for Christmas dinner.

Sunday, December 21, 2008

Spoiled


Thanks to grandparents, aunts, and uncles, Ellen is swimming in presents this year.

Saturday, December 20, 2008

Party time


The Hanukkah party for children at our synagogue. Ellen is enthusiastically, if illegibly, coloring a dreidel.

Thursday, December 18, 2008

Grace lost


The children's book section at Target. Sorry, Grace. You look young enough to run again in eight years.

Monday, December 15, 2008

Not kidding


OK, now winter is really here. It seems like my Project 365 blog is coming full circle. The early months were full of snow pictures. Here we go again.

Friday, December 12, 2008

El S.O.S.


When trapped on an airplane, anticipating the hours of entertainment the iPhone can provide, this error screen is not what I want to see.

Fortunately, it started up normally when I tried again. Still, WTF?

Thursday, December 11, 2008

Money!


This East Coat medical school is rolling in dough. This is the "old" building, soon to be replaced by a megamillion dollar upgrade.

Monday, December 8, 2008

First


The first big snowfall of the season. We got about four inches.

Saturday, December 6, 2008

Rockstar!


My daughter, Joan Jett.

Friday, December 5, 2008

March of the ... well, you know


Doing a little holiday shopping in south Minneapolis. Anyone want a stuffed penguin?

Thursday, December 4, 2008

The Joker's second career


My vet's office has a new color scheme. Pirate was not soothed.

Wednesday, December 3, 2008

Starfleet Academy


Doesn't this campus look like Starfleet Academy? The use of the "Enterprise" font on all the buildings certainly helps. One minor nit: there shouldn't be palm trees in San Francisco. Well, we can fix that in post.

Tuesday, December 2, 2008

Healthiest pit in New York


Driving by the World Trade Center construction site on the way to a Manhattan job interview.

Sunday, November 30, 2008

O is for Obama, that's good enough for me


Stopped at my favorite Chicago deli to pick up some bagels, lox, corned beef, and rye to take home with me. They're making a bundle off their very popular Obama cookies. During the election season, they outsold McCain cookies by 20 to 1.

Saturday, November 29, 2008

Season of lights


The Lincoln Park Zoo's holiday light display. Go late at night to see the lights and a bunch of grumpy monkeys unhappy about visitors past their bedtime.

Thursday, November 27, 2008

Girls' Night Out


Ellen and her cousin enjoy a little post-Thanksgiving Dora marathon.

Wednesday, November 26, 2008

Pies pies pies!


Fresh pies galore at the Norske Nook in Osseo, Wisconsin. A mandatory pit stop on the way to Thanksgiving. I picked up a great pumpkin pie and my brother's favorite, blueberry crunch.

Monday, November 24, 2008

Deep Thoughts


Outside a university's admissions office. Inspirational (presumably ancient Greek) aphorism on one side, plenty of school-branded sweatshirts on the other.

Saturday, November 22, 2008

Out cold


A hard-workin' morning of children's services and a swimming lesson knocked her right out. She was asleep thirty seconds after we put her in the car.

Thursday, November 20, 2008

Fog in Orange


Orange County was blanketed in eerie fog. This is looking out over a lake. The specks behind the fence are ducks.

Wednesday, November 19, 2008

In-n-Out


No trip to SoCal can be complete without a visit to the Mecca of fast-food perfection, In-n-Out Burger.

Sunday, November 16, 2008

Butterballs


Butter turkeys, obviously a takeoff on the butter Easter lambs. I missed seeing the butter pumpkins last month.

Friday, November 14, 2008

Donkey and elephant


Outside the Washington Post building. The donkey has pandas painted on it. The elephant (barely visible behind a shrub) has the halls of power (Congress, White House) painted on it. After the election, don't you think they should switch?

Wednesday, November 12, 2008

Three weeks later


My second working trip to D.C. This building (a theater, I think) has added a few stories. See my October 24 entry for comparison.

Tuesday, November 11, 2008

Scott was here


My buddy Scott used to visit Washington regularly. They even erected a statue to him!

Saturday, November 8, 2008

Swim class


After three lessons, she's released her death-grip from mommy's neck, and now she wants to swim on her own.

Wednesday, November 5, 2008

The first thing to go


Look! I parked somewhere. And I snapped a pic to remind myself where I parked.

It's ten days later, and I have no idea where this was.

Tuesday, November 4, 2008

Yes, we did


Just a small portion of the line to vote when the polls opened at 7 AM. Three hundred and fifty of my neighbors were in line ahead of me.

Monday, November 3, 2008

Thinking of blue skies


The painting is stuck in the rafters over the chair in my dentist's office. It's not taking me away...

Saturday, November 1, 2008

Five years


Hard to believe, but there it is.

Our friend Gail collaborated with me on a surprise night out for Rachel. It was a great anniversary, even if the gift theme (wood) kinda sucked.

Friday, October 31, 2008

My little giraffe


Oh, she really got the hang of trick-or-treating this year. Three blocks in our candy-rich neighborhood netted her about five pounds of treats.

Sunday, October 26, 2008

On the grid


Shopping at our local SuperTarget again. I didn't notice until I looked at this picture how oppressive the giant grid of fluorescent ceiling panels is.

Saturday, October 25, 2008

Toddler, at rest


Back home again. The morning routine has Ellen join us in bed to watch Sesame Street. (She was put out when we'd watch it without her.) She's happy to see her daddy (and vice versa).

Friday, October 24, 2008

Hammers and saws


Construction is omnipresent in this part of D.C. This is just one of the dozen or so buildings in various states of creation or remodeling on my three-block walk to work from the Metro.

Wednesday, October 22, 2008

... or are you just happy to see me?


After three days working in the Waterfront district of D.C., I finally saw some water. Here are the boat slips with a view of the Washington Monument.

Tuesday, October 21, 2008

Don't drive; use plasma screens instead


The National Geographic Society's M Street facade has a giant marquee blaring out a message thanking me for walking (and thus saving energy, or the planet, or something). The NGS also has floor to ceiling plasma screens showing off their latest specials and an announcer's voice broadcast onto the mostly empty street. I'll have to walk a LOT to counteract that energy waste.

Monday, October 20, 2008

Logan, start your run


I like the run-down '70s futurism of Washington's Metro system. The big concrete cylinders are where we're supposed to live when nuclear war drives us underground. Who wants to be a Morlock?

Saturday, October 18, 2008

The Crusher


Stomping on some leaves on a nice fall day.

Friday, October 17, 2008

Needs an onion dome


The Museum of Russian Art, in a beautifully restored church. This is just a half-mile from my home, but I have never visited until today.

Tuesday, October 14, 2008

U-Turn to avoid Newark


Another fly-in trip where I didn't get to capture anything particularly local or interesting. There's downtown Newark. Enjoy.

Monday, October 13, 2008

Dinner date


Interviewing at a college in New Jersey, I was fortunate enough to have Sue & Joe join me for dinner. Best part of the interview.

Saturday, October 11, 2008

Minnow? Guppy?


I can't remember if they called us beginning swimmers minnows or guppies, way back in the '60s.

Thursday, October 9, 2008

Yom Kippur


Our high holiday services are held in a Unitarian church that used to be a Jewish synagogue. (Note the stars on the benches.)

During the rest of the year, we're at our synagogue, which used to be a ... wait for it ... Unitarian church.

Tuesday, October 7, 2008

Our nation's capital


When I knew I was going to D.C. for a job interview, I figured I'd snap the Jefferson Memorial or some other iconic structure for my photoblog. However, I managed to spend two days in D.C. without seeing any of the expected marble edifices. I could have taken lots of pictures of the grim '70s sci-fi Metro subway stations. All those concrete cylinders need to be complete is Logan starting his run.

Here's a tranquil little city park, near the college where I interviewed. Although this neighborhood is called the Waterfront, all I saw was some decayed urban renewal housing stock and a whole lot of cranes ushering in the next wave of urban renewal -- upscale condos.

The park was nice, though. The perfectly circular pond even had ducks.

Sunday, October 5, 2008

=


Ever wonder where those little 'equal sign' bumper stickers come from? The HQ of the Human Rights Campaign is right across the street from my D.C. hotel. When I picked up "HRC" on my laptop's wi-fi, I thought Hillary Rodham Clinton had an office nearby.

Wednesday, October 1, 2008

Trickling


The top of Minnehaha Falls. Normally, there should be a steady stream of water or even a torrent. We've had such a dry summer that only a few rivulets are pathetically dripping over the falls.

Tuesday, September 30, 2008

Preschooler Photographer


Ellen now wants to use the iPhone to take pictures. This is not a bad first effort.