Tuesday, July 13, 2010

Photography!

Some pictures, courtesy of my beautiful friend Ava, from the weekend that she visited me! :D First , we ate Tapas and drank some awesome spanish cocktails on the UWS....  
I dipped my toes in coolphotographer-hipsterland and tried out her camera, by taking a pic of myself (not narcissistic at all, i know!)                                                                             We ate some sure-to-cure the hangovers pb sandwiches for breakfast...      
And, last but definitely not least, Ava officially became the first person in history to ever successfully capture a cute picture of my dog {the reason for this being that he is crazy about light, (on top of everything else) and when ever someone picks up a camera, he starts running around being mad...}
Hi, Willy!


xxx
Rose

4 comments:

  1. Willy doesn't look crazy in that picture. Kudos to the photographer ;)!

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  2. Hi, Rose! I got your comment on my blog, asking about my opinion on "full recovery." Sorry I'm contacting you in a comment! I couldn't find an email address. Anyway, I think recovery is really up to the person. It's how you want to define it. Is it a certain weight? Regular periods? A social life? A regular job? An abstract sense of food freedom? I know many people who still have food issues, but say they are "fully recovered" because they have achieved their personal goals. The question that's more important than "Is full recovery possible?" is "What does recovery mean to you?" I'm glad I found your blog :)

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  3. Kim! Thanks so much for your comment. I think that's a great point- recovery is totally subjective. I think it would be really worthwhile to write out what I think "full recovery" means, like a little checklist...
    Oops i should probably make my email visible somewhere on here...ill try to figure that out. And i ADORE your blog, just sayin ;)

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  4. Hi, Rose! I got your comment on my blog, asking about my opinion on "full recovery." Sorry I'm contacting you in a comment! I couldn't find an email address. Anyway, I think recovery is really up to the person. It's how you want to define it. Is it a certain weight? Regular periods? A social life? A regular job? An abstract sense of food freedom? I know many people who still have food issues, but say they are "fully recovered" because they have achieved their personal goals. The question that's more important than "Is full recovery possible?" is "What does recovery mean to you?" I'm glad I found your blog :)

    ReplyDelete