Some days I get tired of myself, my thoughts. I just want to turn them off and drift in an empty headed haze, lie down with a book and get lost in someone else's thoughts for a change. Lately between writing and taking pictures, I've been living too closely to my own thoughts, too intensely involved.
I take a walk, and I see pictures everywhere-- in a wide-open scene of trees and sky, or a small spot of sunlit color in a hidden berries. I stop and snap and move on always seeing more, more, more.
I used to walk with no other purpose than to exercise-- fast-paced, sweaty and cathartic-- but I can't do that anymore for some reason. There is beauty everywhere. I want to capture it. Need to.
I used to go to bed with a book. I wandered in another world until I fell asleep, and the book slipped aside. Now I stay up later than I should, focused on my own inner world, writing down my thoughts and observations. For some reason, I need to do this, and I want to, but I miss the time away from myself I got from a book.
I took a walk on the college campus the other day. It's a beautiful campus, more expansive than when I attended. New buildings, new dorms, and a new wall-- more decorative than functional -- caught my eye.
Engraved in the concrete was a saying by Horace Mann, an early education reformer: "Coiled up in this institution as in a spring, there is a vigor whose uncoiling may wheel the spheres."
It struck a chord in me. I love the language, and the image-- a vigorous student body coiled together, ready to move the planets.
But it spoke to me in a different way. "There is a vigor within you, too," it said. "A spring is uncoiling and prodding from within, making you restless, keeping you awake, keeping you wired, when you'd rather drift.
I always had vigor. I didn't squander it; I merely used it to survive. Now I can use it for something else. For my "someday" plans: someday I'll write, someday I'll travel, someday I'll . . .
I stopped after school at the Better Bean, the family owned coffee shop in the center of town. There is a small back room where local artists display their work.
"Is there a schedule for the back room," I asked the owner.
"Are you an artist?" he asked.
"No," I said. "Well, I . . . I'm a photographer. That's an artist of sorts."
"It is," he said.
He'll schedule the back room for me next time I go in, when he has his book.
This is my "someday." When I let the spring uncoil, who knows what spheres I'll wheel.
~~~~~
"The future has a way of arriving unannounced." George Will
Comments
A quilt artist is doing somewhat the same thing you are doing -- venturing into a little different arena. Virginia Spiegel has taken her art, her blogs, her inspiration and put them together into a new book with all of the proceeds to benefit the American Cancer Society. Here's what she sent to me about it:
My book, "Art, Nature, Creativity, Life, " is now available with 100% of the proceeds going directly to the American Cancer Society.
"Art, Nature, Creativity, Life" is stuffed with essays; art, art, and more art; recommended books for artists, nature lovers, gardeners and other creative types; over 80 inspirational photos; more than 35 haikus, and much, much more. The nineteen chapters are greatly expanded versions of the best issues of my e-newsletter of the same name.
For ordering information, reviews, and more information about this web-based book, please visit:
http://www.virginiaspiegel.com/NewFiles/ACSFundraiser.html
Maybe this is a form of outlet you might like to consider for some of your own work.
Dawn
I must call again sometime soon. Have a good week-end. I am working...all of it!!!
Dawn~ I'll check out your friends site now that I'm feeling better. Sounds like a great idea. Maybe I can tweak something like that to fit my style.
Lisa~ How about meeting me there on Saturday sometime--with your camera?
Janice~ I have the words but I'm letting them swirl without stopping to capture them, so then they're gone.
Ellen~ Do come back! Nice to meet you.
Barbara~ I made the first inquiry. I wonder if I will finalize the deal.
Sarah~ I like the luck quote. It reminds me of what one of my students said: "I have way better luck on tests when I study!"
Rain~ I hear you, but your getting a good jump start on photography. When my kids were little, they were in every shot. Since then I've probably taken more pix of ornamental grass than I ever had of them. :>)
Oh, yes, do go back and sign up for a 'show' in that back room! Wish I could be there. Nice to see them on my computer screen, but nicer still to wander around with a non-fat soy latte and look at them with other people. I could report comments to you - be the fly on the wall (not on the photo). You'll be famous!