I was photographing a continual stream of shoppers moving between floors in Sucre’s central market eye – a parade of vivid colors in motion. When I viewed this particular image on my computer screen, I saw for the first time that the woman in the foreground is not only shopping – she is simultaneously nursing a baby. Meanwhile, the baby itself is lost amidst the lavishly colored bundling. I add context to the scene by including two additional shoppers moving up the steps behind her. To Bolivian eyes, the scene would appear routine. Bolivians are conditioned to seeing such colors, and nursing babies is common in public places. Because public nursing is not as common a practice in the US, my own interpretation of this multi-tasking subject is based on the incongruity of the scene.