Letters to my Children | to my Daughter | 1 of 12

My second Creative Project for 2013 is one that is made for me.  It is called Letters to Our Children.  Each month I will write a letter to one of my children that includes imagery of them along with my words.  It combines the art of their photographs along with the words of my heart.  I am very excited to officially do this project.  I started blogs for each child when they were born that I maintained until the Little Lady was 12 months old.  Then it became more than I could handle, as I ramped up my photography education.  I hope this new creative endeavor will take the place of that in some fashion.  An official way for me to document my thoughts and feelings to them in this year while they are this age for this short moment in time.  I look forward to sharing this project with a lovely group of other artists across the world who not only have a passion for photography but also the written word.

Next in our group is Rebecca Chalmers.

Carey Pace 2013


12 January 2013

My dearest Little Lady,

You are my thumb sucker.  And I have loved every moment of it.  You didn't start immediately.  I searched back into my photo archives and the first images I captured of it are in January of 2010.  You were 18 months old.  I have been captivated ever since.  It has been three years exactly.


Letters to my Daughter by Carey Pace


It does not surprise me in the slightest that little independent you would find something that requires no one else but you to soothe yourself.  Yet there are no words for how it feels, as a mother, when you suck your little thumb while I hold you, and you burrow down into my neck and chest.  It is as if you are saying there is no feeling better in this world.  I agree, Little Lady, I agree.  The scent and feel of your sweet face as you snuggle and suck your thumb are memories I wish to never lose.

The Dentist has harped on me since you started seeing him about how we needed to put a stop to it, and I deflected him.  I have battled internally, immensely, on how to handle this situation.  I believe that you still have a need for self soothing.  The sucking instinct still has a tremendous calming effect on you, and I knew you'd stop one day when you were ready.  I didn't want to force that on you.  So very much.   As we've grown as parents through raising you, I've learned to carefully weigh which issues were hills to die on.  Your sucking your thumb was simply not one for me.  In truth, I adored it so much there was no way I'd try to get you to stop.

Plus, you were still very, very strongly in your defiant, independent ways at the time.  I knew I didn't have it inside of me to fight you on this.  It wasn't worth the battle.  It wasn't worth the suffering to our relationship.  My momma-gut instinct just didn't feel it was the right time.  So I pushed back on the dentist, instead of you, and said 'wait'.  We were engaged in daily battle on issues of character and boundaries.  I knew that neither one of us could handle this on top of everything else.

early 2010
Carey Pace 2013

late 2010-early 2011
Carey Pace 2013

Years flew by.  At some point I realized that you sucked your thumb, a lot.  A lot more than I'd noticed.  And we had started to see your teeth moving.  Shifting.  We couldn't ignore this any more.  You were holding on tighter, instead of relenting slowly by slowly.  Some kids suck their fingers and thumbs in a way that doesn't affect their teeth.  I wish so much this was you.  Unfortunately, the way you suck, you push on your top teeth with tremendous force.  Sweet Lady, I grew up with horrible teeth.  I was always  completely ashamed of my teeth.  They made me feel so ugly.  I taught myself how to smile and laugh without showing my teeth, because I was so embarrassed.  I was not one who was fortunate enough to have braces as a child or teenager, so that was the first thing I did as an adult with an adult job with an adult income.  To this day, I am still incredibly self conscious about my teeth.  Braces helped a lot, but not completely.   I do not want this for you, and that has been my chief motivation in taking away this activity that we both find so wholly endearing.

mid 2011
Carey Pace 2013

late 2011
Carey Pace 2013


Over the summer, we took away sucking your thumb during the day time.  That would be phase I.  Phase II: altogether, would come later.  The first few days of Phase I were hard.  But you did really well.  There were a few episodes of tears, heavy heartfelt tears, but you adjusted quickly.  I held you while you cried and told you I wished you could suck your thumb, too.  You didn't try to sneak.  You would sweetly ask, these last six months, "can I suck my thumb?" whenever you felt the urge.  And most of the time we'd have to tell you 'no'.  The rule was that you had to be in your bed, for nighttime sleeping, to suck your thumb.  It would break my heart to tell you 'no'.  Every time.  My heart yearned to tell you 'yes'.

I believe it was when we took the front rail off the front of your crib that you found the spare crib sheet in the closet.  You loved rolling around in it and pushing your feet against the elastic.  Before long, it became your special blanket.  Although you graduated to a big girl bed, you still held onto the pink flannel crib sheet.  You wanted to have it when you went to sleep.  You wanted to have it downstairs to snuggle and watch a show.  You wanted it accessible at any moment.  Eventually we had an upstairs Soffee and a downstairs Soffee, since we had two identical crib sheets.  You named "her".  For she is a 'she' and her name is Soffee.  You hold her.  You surrounded yourself with her.  You stroke her.  You cover your face with her and inhale her sweet scent.  You utterly adore and love her.

Carey Pace 2013


Carey Pace 2013


We began to warn you in December that after Christmas, it would be time to stop sucking your thumb, forever.  You started to tell me how Soffee makes you want to suck your thumb.  I could have cried a river each time you said that.  For I knew.  I knew just what you meant, and it made me hurt just as much as it made you.  I was devestated thinking we'd have to take Soffee away.  I love Soffee.  I love that you love Soffee.  I know I was more upset about losing Soffee than I was about having to take away your thumb.

An hour before bedtime on the night of Phase II, you told me again how you were so concerned about what to do about Soffee, if you couldn't suck your thumb, for Soffee just makes you want to suck your thumb.  It was all I could do not to break down right there.

iphone captures
Carey Pace 2013

That night, we placed the special thumb guards (link) over your thumbs (for we discovered over the summer how just one wouldn't work. You just switched to the other thumb!).  I read to you.  I sang you songs.  And then I held your hand while you fell asleep.  It is one of my most fond memories.  Your eyes filled with tears, but you were a brave, tough girl.  You accepted our explanations that although we didn't want to have to take this away from you, we have good reason and it is ultimately for your good.  As I write this, it has been four nights that you've not sucked your thumb.  You've done so well.  We are so proud of you we could burst.  You needed a little help falling asleep the second night, and I held your hand again.  But you've fallen asleep on your own the last two.  I could not be more surprised, or proud.  And best of all, you've managed to hold Soffee each night and draw comfort from her familiar scent, her familiar softness, her familiar drape over your head while you lay in your bed, without sucking your thumb.  I believe I am most excited that Soffee gets to remain part of your life.  I don't think my heart would have survived retiring her.

The afternoon before we executed Phase II I asked you to quickly come to the playroom window with Soffee and let me shoot the last time you got to suck your thumb.  These images are so bittersweet, but I'm so glad I captured the four year old you with your special soft blanket and your beloved thumb.  I am so very proud of you, Sweet Pea.

Love, Momma


Next in our group is Rebecca Chalmers.  Please take a few moments to view her letter and the rest of the group.



Carey Pace 2013

Carey Pace 2013


I shot these with my D90 Sigma 30mm f1.4 Nikon 85mm f1.8 Nikon 50mm 1.4D

18 comments:

  1. oh, my goodness..how amazing you have so many sweet pictures of her with her thumb. what treasures Carey!! i love this and your words!! i have a tiny scar on my thumb , to remember the same part of my own life, but it is not near as beautiful as these pictures! so blessed to call you friend Carey. So thankful God placed you in my life last year xo

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  2. heartwarming treasures. this couldn't be a more perfect memoir/letter. this will mean so much to her carey. perfect choices.

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  3. How beautiful are these images!? Bless her heart... I was a finger sucker until the 4th grade... I know its tough , but you are doing the right thing mama. I'm just so happy you have all these amazing images to remember this sweet time of her life.

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  4. LOL..thumb sucking is the best. Adore all of the pics, Carey!

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  5. My husband is 34 and still will put his thumb on the roof of his mouth when he gets all worked up!! Love these, she is such a beautiful girl!

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  6. she's a beauty. i know she will appreciate these images, and your words.

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  7. Rip my heart out, woman!! She has, miraculously, bloomed into an awesome little lady. Even if only periodically and from afar, it has been amazing and awesome to witness. And I too am sad for Soffee.

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  8. Oh, this hurts my heart. I have a four year old thumb sucker and I so wish she could continue.

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  9. oh, i feel the ache. that you have all of this documentation of this tender and vulnerable and sweet thing that has kept her at peace and let her grow into the strong girl she is now...that is awesome, carey. i remember taking away my daughter's paci at two, on her birthday, that new mother obedience kicked in with the doctor. and it still makes me cry. she needed more. i hope soffee will serve her well and that she will realize she is ok. there will be new frontiers, new loves, and ways to grow. a beautiful portrait of an era.

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  10. This was beautiful to the eyes and the heart Carey.

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  11. aww, carey, i loved reading this...tugs at my heart and i have a lump in my throat. so happy that you documented this special time in her life. what a sweet, brave girl.

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  12. Awwwwwww....(and yes, I did. Just a little. So precious though!)

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  13. This entire post just makes me smile. It's so very hard to do things like this for our children, but it's in these specific moments that our love brightly shines. You're a wonderful mother Carey and your little girl is absolutely precious!

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  14. oh Carey, I don't know you but the love vs. heart ache in your post is clearly evident. What a wonderful mother your dear little one has that is so sensitive to the hardship she's going through. It was lovely and heart breaking all at the same time. I think there are a lot of parents that would not be as sensitive and as delicate with the matter of attachment as you, so bless you for that. The images are equally as beautiful and I look forward to joining you in this project. Best wishes for a successful month without thumb sucking.

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  15. how beautiful. i love they way you told this story for her, she is for sure going to cherish these. love love love -tabitha

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  16. Carey, I had to wait for the tears to stop streaming to leave my comment...I couldnt see my keyboard. I love that you are a mama who is thoughtful with her choices for yourself and for your Lady. The fact that you stayed with her, to comfort her and help her fall asleep on that first night made me cry. This is sometimes what they need. They need discipline, they need boundries, but they also need us to be soft and to be there in these big moments.

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  17. Oh, wow! These images are beautiful, and your words brought both smiles and tears. I have two thumb suckers, an almost four-year-old and a one-year-old. When my first started sucking, my first thought was 'braces!' That was the consequence for me as a child. It's so sweet to see them sucking their thumbs, and I love the comfort it brings them. I'm know it's going to be hard for me to help them stop, but your patience and understanding through the process are such a model.:) In the meantime, while they're still sucking, I need to get to shooting this sweet habit.

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  18. These are so precious. I love that you captured this for her. You're obviously an awesome, loving mama.

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