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cynthia zordich

  • NFLThread
  • NFL THREAD EVENTS
  • The Playbook
  • THREAD MEMBER BENEFITS AND PARTNERS
  • THREAD SB LVIII LUNCHEON
  • THREAD SUPER BOWL CELEBRITY FLAG FOOTBALL GAME
  • PRO FOOTBALL HALL OF FAME LUNCHEON/FASHION SHOW /PODCAST
  • THREAD CART
  • ynslivewithnflthread
  • A Bee in a Matchbox
  • when the clock runs out
  • full-blown: women on the verge
  • nflthread.net
  • nflpe articles
  • cynthia zordich blog
  • cynthia zordich home
  • contact cynthia zordich
  • Shutterstock Super Bowl LVII Gallleries
  • THREAD Sponsorship Form
  • THE PLAYBOOK VOL. VI DECK
  • UBS
  • The Playbook Volume VI - The Her Issue
  • THE PLAYBOOK Volume VI Sponsorship Deck pdf
  • Super Bowl Celebrity Flag Football Deck
  • The Playbook Volume VI Permissions
  • 5P Sponsorship Plan
  • JOHN HARDY
  • SUPER BOWL LVIII CELEBRITY FLAG PRESS RELEASE
  • ROSTER
  • THREAD LUNCHEON PROGRAM
  • SBLVIII CELEBRITY FLAG PLAYBOOK
  • Super Bowl LVIII Celebrity Flag Football Staff/Family/Friends Regisration
  • Super Bowl LVIII Celebrity Flag Football Youth Flag Player Form
  • The Playbook Volume V - the PIVOT Issue
  • HerIssue Feature Information Form
  • cool and in the mid-70s
  • commercial photography
  • therapeutic photography workshops
  • artist promotion
  • tradizione cook book
  • wake
  • commissions
  • portraiture
  • A Bee in a Matchbox Review Copy
  • my own personal pinterest
  • therapeutic photography after-school programs
  • facebook
cynthia zordich
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Glass Slipper

Added on January 23, 2013 by cynthia zordich.

Tonight, I met a woman. Brought together by a task at hand and separated by a lifetime of experiences, we found our connection surprisingly fast. The diversion was the writing of note cards and the licking of envelopes. The connection was candor, honesty and her smile-- a wonderful slight space and the ability to share it, completely. We were sharing our personal address books in inviting our friends to a local jazz event. With that sentiment, she told me that she had lost her husband, and with him had lost many of her own invitations. "I passed a store window the other day, she said, and I saw this beautiful gown. It made my heart flutter and then, it made it fall," Of the many things she missed in the missing of her husband, "It may sound frivolous, she continued, but I loved dressing up! Ever since I was a little girl, I dreamed of dressing up and feeling like a princess. When I married, we went to so many beautiful events and when I walked into a room with him, I felt like a queen." Her endearing smile found a natural fade in the progression from memory to reality. I leaned into her across the table and said, "Promise me you'll go back and buy that gown. Promise me you'll find a place to wear it.  Do it once a year-- for you. PROMISE."  Her eyes widened. Her smile broadened. She liked the idea and she promised. She showed me that she wore his wedding ring-- re-sized. I thought about how  she wore her love for him-- over-sized. We went back to the invites. These lists. Some make the annual update. Some do not. They scan their cursors across the name and hit delete, never fully understanding the impact they are having on a life.

Having been on many email lists, myself, I understand the feeling of being out of season. The paths that we cross are sometimes fast and fleeting.  Still, that does not change the way I walk down them. Still, I open my heart. I don't care if it is for the day or decade. The people in our lives matter. We take pieces of each, wherever we go. And tonight, I will fall asleep with the vision of a beautiful new friend in a stunning red dress, blurred in the spin of her dance.

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TAKE YOUR TRASH TO THE BEACH.

Added on January 20, 2013 by cynthia zordich.

With much activity in my life and in my head, with a flight to catch in a few hours-- I felt a tug to flee. Instead of a long shower before take off-- I opted for a quick trip to the beach. I jumped on a trick bike and flew down the hills of Manhattan Beach and headed for the pier. The wind hit my face so hard, that I looked back to see if my anxieties were caught up in the gust. The sun felt good and soon, I began to slow my peddling. Once at the pier, I stopped and listened. Faint giggles from the kids climbing the sand dunes, a mandolin, a guitar, waves rolling in, seagulls, under riding currents of advice and conversation. While full, it seemed that everyone on the pier had a common respect for each other's needs. Peace. Quiet. Soulfulness. Some reached for it far into the ocean, some baited their wishes on a line and fished for it, some serenaded lady peace and some found her in their books. They walked, they ran, they played, they read, they sat, they thought, they listened. What is best, I decided, is that they all stopped. For this one moment, they stopped life and made this morning happen. I watched them and I wondered,

Is this the beginning of a new week or the end of the last?

In finding my own peace, I photographed them all. Once taken, I said hi and shared with them their beautiful moment. Then, I emailed their shots to them on the spot. I left feeling like I had received, but also like I had given. That was enough to get me on that flight with a free-er mind and a lighter load-- which is good, 'cause you get charged extra for heavy baggage these days, you know.

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1-13-13 Happy Birthday Daddy

Added on January 12, 2013 by cynthia zordich.

Jimmie Robinson

He was a pigeon-toed lightweight boxer who had his nose opened up and  the weight of the world on his shoulders by the time he was eleven.

I cannot sum up my dad in just a few paragraphs. We all knew him in different ways, at different times, and times certainly are different now.

What I can do, is share a few stories that I hope will cause you to reflect on your own.

When my sister Tina was saying her first words, Mummie pointed to a bird and said, "Look! Birdie!" My dad Said, "Joanne, I don't want her talking like some jagoff-- it's a robin."

On the outside, with two girls, some might think he would spoil us, shelter us. Instead, he raised us like guys.

When I started first grade he said, "Walk in like you own the joint."

When I was eleven,  I stole raisins from the Open Pantry. When I got caught and told my dad he said, "You chicken shit raisin thief!  If you're gonna to steal, steal something worth taking! A TV! Rob a house! And you're not even any good, YOU GOT CAUGHT!"

If he told us to hurry up or he was leaving-- he left.  If things got tough he'd say, "What? Can't you handle it?"

So many quips embedded in my mind:  Eat 'em for breakfast, All you got is your face. If you want it- go out and get it!

It was a lot to take in-- but it got through.

When the four of us sat down to dinner, Tina would pump Daddy for information about the shop and he would tell it like it was.

When we went out, he taught us how to treat people-- all the same.

He was so charming and as mad as Mummie could get- his one liners always made her laugh. Their love was our battleground and with it we learned to respect the twists of passion and tolerate the pitfalls of pride. And, where some couldn't take that ride, now that it's all said and done-- it was a great one.

In the end, he was a Grampa. All he ever wanted to be. He so cherished the time he spent with his own Papa- the one person who let him be a boy, yet taught him how to be a man.

Five grandsons: Michael T., Michael V., Alex, Joseph, Gerard.  Two grandaughters:  Julianna and Aidan. He treated you all different, but loved you all the same.

And in Grampa's own words: "Holy Hell Babe! I got all thoroughbreds!"

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It's a jungle out there.

Added on January 8, 2013 by cynthia zordich.

This week I introduced my sixth graders to their digital cameras. We started the semester listening to records and shooting film. I was happy to introduce the concept of anticipation to these young kids- who rarely have to wait for anything. They had to work hard for those early shots. They had to meter their light. They had to set their exposure.They had to focus. They had to fire the shutter, They had to advance the shutter. And then they had to wait for the film to be processed. In the end it was a process that they really took to and we made a decision to start Throwback Thursdays. But today, we went techy and shot with our Nikon Coolpix cameras. It was a simple shoot of each of the kids walking passed a bulletin board in the hall. Something they do a dozen times a day. When we got back to the room we started to throw ideas out about our shoot. We talked about what it is like in the halls. Lockers slamming. Yelling. Laughing. Running. Noise. Panic. Rushing. Fear. Hoping you see someone special. Hoping you don't run into someone who is giving you a hard time. THAT group of girls. THAT group of guys. "Wow", I said, "It sounds like a jungle out there." They said, "Yes, It was." We talked about how hard it is to reach out to people- they said that they often try. One of the kids threw out the idea of treating people the right way in the halls. It was from that idea that we came up with our message. It's a simple question, What would you say if you passed yourself in the hall?  It introduces the concept of accountability and empathy. I thought about my own treks in the halls of my high school when records spun and yearbook shots were snapped (on film). Not much has changed. The halls are our first real look at the real world. How we walk through them is our decision. How we treat others is our decision. Some get swallowed up, some get beat up, some walk right down the middle in groups and some stay close to the wall. My favorite times were those rare moments when I walked the hall alone. There was a beautiful light that flowed all the way down the middle cast from the door at the end. Symbolic in many ways, for in the end, we all walk out of those doors for good. We hope that our experiences there helped shape the kind of people we become.  KIND being the operative word.

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This is not a knife.

Added on January 7, 2013 by cynthia zordich.

What you are looking at is a piece of art, a piece of my father, a part of me.

I love the holidays-- when the kids all come home from school and with them, come their friends. Our driveways are full, once again. Morning coffee is shared with random guests-- relics from a late night. They bring back their energy, they share their dreams, they have a light in their eyes called possibility and even, passion. You get to know them all in the morning-- even the quiet ones. Dom Valerio is quiet, kind, gentle. He is an old soul and now, he is a craftsman.

My Godson Michael is a fisherman, an influence from my father. My dad would take all of the kids out and patiently show them how to cast, how to bait the hook, how to brace yourself for reeling in and finally, how to gut and clean. Michael was the one who became most attached to the sport and he inherited my dad's fishing boat, The Julianna.

I commissioned Dom to craft a fishing knife for my nephew at Christmas and within days after the new year, he returned with it.

I look at this knife, and when I break it apart, I can equate its parts to my father's role in all of our lives-- especially Michael's.

Hand crafted, there are areas that remain rough and imperfect. These imperfections will grow on Michael and make this knife, his own. With love and touch, they may even soften. As beautiful as it is, it could cut him, even scar him. That is the risk he takes by choosing to carry it. Yet, it will also protect him, defend him, teach him skill and precision. The grip was made to fit his own. It will become an extension of himself. He will reach for it blindly. They will react as one-- the boy and his knife. He will clean it, sharpen its blade when it becomes dull, care for it, respect it.  And when its leather case becomes soft and worn, it will remain at his right side, within grip. Always there. Always ready. A familiar presence.

"What is the hole at the tip?", I asked Dom. "Oh, that is for a floater in case he drops it in the water. It won't sink."

It was then that I had to walk out of the room. Almost four years have passed since we lost my dad. I have missed him. A few times. I myself, felt like I might go under - but something inside kept me afloat. Before I set Michael's knife next to my father's, I ran my hand over and around the small circle at the tip and smiled. Yes, this is much, much more, than a knife.

For commissions contact Dominic Valerio @ dominicjvalerio@gmail.com

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Inside thoughts...

Added on December 13, 2012 by cynthia zordich.

I was raised by a mother who always spoke her mind. Always. Her favorite motto? I say it. You think it.  I often wonder-- how awesome it must be to say EVERYTHING that you feel like. I am certain that there is absolutely nothing on my mother's chest. Today is her birthday. 72. In her honor, I decided to let my kids experience the liberating feeling that comes from the unleashing of thought. I handed out trash paper bags, markers and paper and told them all to go off in separate corners. I gave them 15 minutes to write down every negative thought they had in their head-- everything that they can't stand in their lives-- anything they wish they could say to someone, but couldn't. I gave them big thick sharpies for impact. When they were done, I had them wrinkle up each page with passion and rage. Then, I had them stuff and slam those thoughts into their trash bags. From there, we set up a neutral backdrop and photographed each bag accompanied by a very angry child. Some of the kids wanted to throw their thoughts in the air. Some wanted to take them home to destroy them (under supervision). All agreed that it felt good to get it out. To see it on paper and to feel like maybe-- just maybe -- they got rid of a few of them for good.

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Shut Up!!!

Added on December 5, 2012 by cynthia zordich.

How many times do we shush our kids?

How many of their questions go unanswered?

This week, I was in front of my  class covering depth of field, when for some unknown reason, one of my student’s put a piece of tape on her mouth. The other kids thought it must have looked pretty cool, because before I knew it- everyone was starring at me with their mouth’s taped shut. For a short while, it allowed me to complete the lecture, but suddenly, the visual made me sad. Actually, they looked sad. I started to wonder-- are we shutting up our kids? Are we ever letting them talk? Are we working so hard to keep them still that we are silencing them into indifference?

I stopped and asked them that very question. 

The assignment. What are we not hearing?

What would you talk about if we would just listen for once? 

 
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YOU SO FAKE!

Added on November 13, 2012 by cynthia zordich.

One of my favorite projects to date dealt with what I call the concept of masking. I asked the kids to write down their honest mood that day. Honest mood. Some were tired, some were worried about a test, some hungry.

Then we talked about how we don't always show our moods to the world-- putting on a "fake face" or a mask to cover our feelings.  From there they made T-shirts with their true feelings stenciled on the front. They took pictures of each other's fake faces and held them out in front of their faces. The end result was the You So Fake exhibit. The project was awesome to view, but more important, was its message. "Be careful of what you say to someone-- how you treat them-- because you never know what's going on inside. 

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rock pile.

Added on November 4, 2012 by cynthia zordich.

With my family scattered all over, I started a tiny mantra for us one day. I had picked up a few great looking rocks at the park - one for each of us. They came in all the shapes and sizes that reflected each one of us. Even though I am suddenly the runt in the fam, my daughter Aidan's is the smallest rock. She'll always be the baby, no matter how tall. And although both of my boys passed up their old man, Daddy will always be the largest rock. I keep them out - one set in my bedroom, one set on the desk in the den, a third in the family room. When I walk by, I think about who is having a big day and I'll maneuver the group so that rock sits on top. When Michael is on top, all of our smaller rocks look so vulnerable - like any minute we might collapse - but we never do. We hold him up, sometimes for days/weeks (I don't always walk by) and when I return, there we all are, a united front, strong, because we are together - a distributed balance of support. When Aidan is on top, it looks like she could conquer the world and some day, I think she might.  I always try to get a photo of the assortment - for the archives. Looking at them as a group, I can pretty much remember what was happening. The structures have become very intimate treasures of our scattered years. Sometimes, we’re all huddled together around one rock. I guess that is when one of us is on their own and all we can do is be there. Sometimes, it's up to one person to hold the other one up. That is usually Aidan with one of her brothers. Sometimes as parents, you have to stay out. Sometimes, one of them is setting out on a new course, and all we can do is line up and either follow or wait in place for their return. These little rocks. They speak so clearly of our place in the family. We could learn so much from them and to be honest, there are times that I do - especially when it comes to pulling my rock away. I always start out in a lead role in the rock pile-- but then I think about it-- think about what's best for them, rather than what makes me feel best. It is then that I restructure and either take on a supporting role or set my rock aside to just watch.  When I walk away, I feel like I've done something good. As if somehow -- wherever they are, they can feel their placement and importance in the pile up. To date, my favorite is the one where we all lean into each other. To me, it says, everyone is okay. It reminds me of morning cartoons and Father's Day brunches. Long drives to the Jersey Shore and late nights singing in the den.  Those simple memories where there was nothing riding on the day. No wins, no losses, no grades. no goodbyes. We take those days for granted when we are in the middle of them. Those days that build the foundation of the family. In the end, you hope you taught them well about family life and love. You hope that the rocks that make up your little fam serve to anchor as they push through the ever changing tides of their lives.

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Mr. and Mrs. Joanne and Kathleen

Added on September 17, 2012 by cynthia zordich.

I have been dying to write this blog. Life and football have kept me from getting at it. So far, I have carried the words and images with me through two W's and a half marathon. Finally, today, as I sit at my sister's house, sore from the race, loved, and in between games, I have a moment. 

I was a student of my father. Influenced by him. Molded by him. Lectured, tested and challenged into a twist by him. This is true, and I carry that as a badge of honor. Yet, while my father did the character training, it was my mother and my aunt who shaped me and my sister in other ways. In ways I never fully understood, until now. My mother, Joanne, and my Aunt Kathleen -- my father's little sister. Joanne and Kathleen. Their names roll together easily as habit and they wore them proudly on uncountable tags at PTA meetings, swim meets, football games, banquets, graduations -- you name it. Mr. and Mrs. Joanne and Kathleen.

I never thought to miss my dad at those events. I never knew to miss him on our family vacations -- which is kind of funny when you think of it. He sent us off, and we made the most of it. That's all I remember growing up. My Aunt Kath, my mother and their laughter. The buckle your knees - choke on your cigarette kind of humor that lit up our summer nights on the back patio and loosened up the mood at all of our escapades -- wakes and burials included. My dad would stay back and cook for us. We would come home to find him at the island with his newspaper and an old flick. My mother would put a pot of coffee on and they would start to tell my dad all about whatever it was. My dad would move the food from the stove top to the island and the stories and the cackling would start. He'd patronize them for a bit, and then look at them like they were both real jagoffs. That's when it really got funny.

It is Mid-September and I just spent four days at my sister’s (bayfront shore house) in Stone Harbor (that's a private joke). It is just the four of us, plus Jack. So many years have passed-- yet time stands still. From coffee on the back deck to beach chairs to the scrabble board, we told and retold stories. We pointed out all of our physical flaws because, "if we don't tell each other who is going to?” We fell over several times - laughing, peeing, of course. There and then I remembered why I always loved coming home to them. There and then I understood why me and my sister are who we are.

Their body language, while they talked, paralleled the best of what they gave to us. They sat without vanity and spoke without pretense. Their thoughts, unedited. The ebb (two b's) and flow of their conversation, in sync. They had an invisible cue to bring it back up when they dug too deep. They catered to each other-- but not too much. They showed concern, but not sympathy. They bitched -- but only for a laugh. Perhaps, when I was too young, I didn't realize the qualities that were woven into their conversation. Laughter was the thread and in the end the fabric was rich in color, worn and durable.

I watched Tina, my mother and my Aunt Kath a lot this week. I took it all in. Their eyes. Their hands. The way they lit their cigarettes. I listened closer than I ever have. Once I packed up my Jetta, kissed them all goodbye and hit the Stone Harbor bridge, I had a lump in my throat, for sure, but I never felt more complete.

As a drove the highway trek to State College, I knew what I was. A girl raised by girls. Raised to be strong, real, resilient and most important of all - raised to find humor in a twisted, unpredictable world. I thought a lot about my daughter, Aidan, and my niece, Julianna. Our girls. Mine and my sister's. We worry about the awesome responsibility we have in raising them. We want them to take only the best of us. To be better than us. We worry, and then they walk in and light up the room - comfortable ease, confidence, serious - peppered with a twisted sense of humor. It makes me smile knowing there is some part of the four of us in each of them. It is exciting to watch them put their own spin on “us” and soar -- the four of us below, looking up, clapping, a little too loudly. A crazed ensemble of bedazzled sandals and tinted sunglasses, lipstick smiles and neon nail polish. I laugh at the sight of us, and warm at the thought of that incredible week, together.

Source: joanneandkathleen
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