The text
Crying by the side of the road
Family portrait
Job hunting at my new desk, the kitchen table. To stay on unemployment, you're required to apply to 5 jobs a week.
Home sweet home
My son
Unexpected
Self-portrait
The stress of having two little mouths to feed is overwhelming. What if I can't do it? What kind of mom am I?
Madeleine creates a game with a piece of rope, a reminder that she does not need much other than unconditional love.
Trying to keep life normal for the kids at Halloween.
Our Christmas tree
Untitled
Happy 5th birthday
Job hunting
Untitled
How can you tell a 5 year old that Santa is broke?
- © Julia Vandenoever
The current economic crisis knocked on our door on October 28th, 2011. In one 24-hour period, life as we knew it came to a screeching halt when my husand and I were laid-off within hours of each other on the same day. In the morning, when I was told that my longtime position in publishing had been eliminated, I froze. But when my husband texted me two hours later to say he had also been cut loose, I went numb. It was on my drive home, with my personal possessions stuffed in a cardboard box beside me, that something broke. I had to pull the car over and absorb the shock. For three years, I’d been half-listening to the unemployment stories on NPR during my morning commute. And now, with one grand gesture of bad timing, I found myself with my own story, a story of a husband and a wife who have become a part of the 13.3 million unemployed Americans.
We are a typical middle class American family: one mom, one dad, one girl, one boy, and one dog. The five of us live a one-story 1,100 square foot blue brick ranch in the foothills of Colorado. By nature an optimist, I’ve always endeavored to show the shimmer just below the surface of everything, but now I see that shimmer as a fragile illusion. Since October 28th, I have been photographing ordinary moments of family life, partly to remember, but also to document life living with the burden of worry and the struggle of two unemployment parents raising a family, while trying to remain hopeful. I’ve discovered that life does not stop with unemployment—or with children. Birthdays and holidays continue, breakfasts need to be made, laundry needs to be done, and each day we put on a brave face and try to find meaning in this experience.
In many ways, being unemployed has given me the ability to see the world differently and given me the power to bring voice to the ordinary. I want to understand and develop my project, Slidelined, through both photography and video to create a multi-media piece. The support of the FotoVisura Grant will help me continue to work and grow this project through 2012.

















