❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤ #Repost @chrishayzel (@get_repost) ・・・ When I was a kid my mom and I used to wake up early every morning to rollerblade to school but we would always make time to stop at the Agoura Deli for breakfast on the way. One morning, whilst we enjoyed our breakfast (mine invariably a water bagel with cream cheese, watermelon, and a glass of water) a stranger snapped this photo of us on his Polaroid camera, approached us and handed the photo to my mom saying, “I really think you guys should have this.” Unbeknownst to him that stranger had perfectly encapsulated that time in our lives. People sometimes ask what it was like growing up with celebrity parents, likely expecting to hear a story of extravagant surroundings and massive empty houses, perhaps even tinted by an underlying current of abandonment and/or negligence supplemented with toys and gadgets. However my childhood was anything but that. It was spent in forests, in the ocean, or on airplanes traveling across those oceans. It was spent rollerblading EVERYWHERE, playing hockey on film sets, being friends with the whole crew and crashing the occasional birthday party at a McDonalds in France just because. Our house, though relatively sizable, was anything but extravagant and was only that big so that it could accommodate the revolving door of Swedish pro skiers, Hawaiian surfers and world travelers that would come stay with us for whole seasons and teach me bad words in other languages. And my mom was ever present through it all encouraging me to experience the world, draw my own conclusions and develop my own way of expressing them. I’ve been very VERY fortunate to have grown up knowing that all the wealth in the world is not what makes you rich. With or without money, your family, your friends, and even the seemingly innocuous strangers in the Deli are what truly make life worth the trouble. Being ten years into adulthood and still trying to figure this whole thing out it’s sometimes easy to get wrapped up in the complexities of the life train, but it’s helpful to have these memories to look back on and be reminded of life’s actual simplicity. • • #familypic #gratefulforlife #childhoodmemories

niapeeplesさん(@niapeeples)が投稿した動画 -

ニア・ピープルズのインスタグラム(niapeeples) - 2月27日 07時10分


❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤
#Repost @chrishayzel (@get_repost)
・・・
When I was a kid my mom and I used to wake up early every morning to rollerblade to school but we would always make time to stop at the Agoura Deli for breakfast on the way. One morning, whilst we enjoyed our breakfast (mine invariably a water bagel with cream cheese, watermelon, and a glass of water) a stranger snapped this photo of us on his Polaroid camera, approached us and handed the photo to my mom saying, “I really think you guys should have this.” Unbeknownst to him that stranger had perfectly encapsulated that time in our lives. People sometimes ask what it was like growing up with celebrity parents, likely expecting to hear a story of extravagant surroundings and massive empty houses, perhaps even tinted by an underlying current of abandonment and/or negligence supplemented with toys and gadgets. However my childhood was anything but that. It was spent in forests, in the ocean, or on airplanes traveling across those oceans. It was spent rollerblading EVERYWHERE, playing hockey on film sets, being friends with the whole crew and crashing the occasional birthday party at a McDonalds in France just because. Our house, though relatively sizable, was anything but extravagant and was only that big so that it could accommodate the revolving door of Swedish pro skiers, Hawaiian surfers and world travelers that would come stay with us for whole seasons and teach me bad words in other languages. And my mom was ever present through it all encouraging me to experience the world, draw my own conclusions and develop my own way of expressing them. I’ve been very VERY fortunate to have grown up knowing that all the wealth in the world is not what makes you rich. With or without money, your family, your friends, and even the seemingly innocuous strangers in the Deli are what truly make life worth the trouble. Being ten years into adulthood and still trying to figure this whole thing out it’s sometimes easy to get wrapped up in the complexities of the life train, but it’s helpful to have these memories to look back on and be reminded of life’s actual simplicity. •

#familypic #gratefulforlife #childhoodmemories


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