Weekly Photo Challenge: From Above – Whirling Vortex

It was our first day in San Diego.  My older sister, Diana, and I were visiting our younger sister, Lori.  We arrived in the early morning.  Knowing we would be tired but eager to see the sights, Lori suggested we visit Old Town for lunch, and then drive up to the Point Loma Lighthouse.  It was perfect.

Some of my favorite shots of the four days we three sisters were together I took at Point Loma.  We meandered through the grounds and up toward the lighthouse.  The vistas were excellent.  I snapped photos of my sisters in relaxed action, and of the building itself as we came closer to it.  Though small, it had a nice museum that featured the huge, prismatic glass structures used in centuries past to cast great beams of light out over nighttime oceans.

As I walked up the winding staircase toward the top of the lighthouse, there was little of interest to photograph.  When I reached the top, it was hard to get a good shot up –  but looking down took my breath away.

From Above Whirling Vortex

From Above
Whirling Vortex

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green on blue (weekly photo challenge: up)

Earth Day dawned cold after a cloudless night.  As the sun warmed the air and earth, I ventured out for a walk in my neighborhood with my husband Creighton, and beagle Josie.  There was one dab of a white cloud in the sky looking like it might be lost and wondering where all the other clouds had gone.  Walking under a tall Aspen tree, I looked up to see its leaves framed against the bright blue sky.  As long as I can remember I have loved the sight of spring green leaves upon the background of blue sky.  In an earlier post I noted that the green in plants is created by photosynthesis; the process in which light is absorbed by plant proteins that contain chlorophyll pigments.  And what makes the sky blue?  Molecules in the air that scatter blue light from the sun more than they scatter red light.  Here are some of the images I captured of green on blue.

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solvitur ambulando

Every page of this gorgeous, hand made book is a work of art. Judi Goldberg has created a masterpiece of poem and process, painstakingly selecting every element. Each page is printed on paper that augments her message. The fonts, dingbats and images she has chosen magnify the meaning of her words – her thoughts – her sensations. And all, I mean ALL of it done one footstep, one hand stroke at a time. This is a very limited pressing deserving the attention of serious artists and collectors of rare works.

judigoldberg's avatarhere.say.

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available from author

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earth + sun (weekly photo challenge ~ change)

These photos were taken on the northwest shore of Orcas Island, Washington, USA.  Camera:  Panasonic Lumix DMC-FZ47  No enhancements, no filters, just cropped and sized.

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green + light (weekly photo challenge: color)

White has no hue; it is the color we see when we look at light which contains all the wavelengths of the visible spectrum, at full brightness and without absorption.  Substances appear white because their surfaces reflect back most of the light that strikes them.*

Green is a combination of two primary colors; blue and yellow.  The green in plants is created by photosynthesis; the process in which light is absorbed by plant proteins that contain chlorophyll pigments.  This chemical reaction provides the energy a plant requires to live. *

Side by side, green and white are stunning.  Here are some examples from my gardens.

*Wikipedia

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on being

my hands pull out the dead shrub
I pour water into a hole in the earth
plant a life form
birds twitter above
clouds swirl
the universe opens
in a heartbeat

stories around night fires
over centuries
and generations
seek to explain
if not understand
let alone comprehend
the mystery separating
what is certain and
the wholly unknown

stars rewrite the heavens
fear and reverence twist within
we knit the distance between
learning
to survive
find safe haven
love and be loved
to realize our individual truth
the essence of being
and wonder at the sheer immensity
of it all

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The Imagi Nation (Daily Prompt: Fantasy)

Two Lips

Two Lips

What a sad place the world would be without fantasy.  There is a poignant scene in Miracle on 34th Street when Kris Kringle teaches Suzie how to imagine.  It always reminds me how important it is to encourage a child’s imagination using whatever means they can understand.  Fantasy is one way: it is gentle, inspires hope, gives us incentive to get through hard times or to be on our best behavior when it would be easy to get cranky.  Most importantly, fantasy provides room for us to expand and embellish an image or story thereby cultivating our personal creativity.

Tubular Moss

Tubular Moss
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Weekly Photo Challenge: Lost in the Details

This gallery contains 5 photos.

Living in the Pacific Northwest provides year-round pleasure in the beauty of moss.  It is a fascinating plant form which, when photographed up close, has an other-worldly appearance.  I hope you enjoy this small study of moss growing on the … Continue reading

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Peach Pie Reflection

That first summer in Pullman I began to smell like oily sardines to myself.  A physically immature eleven year old, I longed for my body to develop.  This strong off-putting odor marked the beginning of my very slow odyssey into womanhood; a journey that stretched over the years and into the rolling wheat fields of the Palouse.  Dad was taking summer school classes at WSC (now WSU) with a goal of acquiring a doctorate degree in education.  After classes he returned to the little rented bungalow at the top of West Main Street, energized and filled with new ideas.  Mike would tell him about our adventures that day, while I helped Mom prepare and serve dinner in the tiny cramped kitchen.  The four of us (Diana had stayed in Wenatchee with our grandparents) would picnic on blankets in the minuscule back yard, hoping to catch a breeze on those hot dry evenings.

Though Mike and I were uncertain, our parents knew we would be moving to Pullman for good at the end of summer.  With hopes we might start to make new friends Mom enrolled us in the WSC Youth Summer Recreation Camp.  A curious, bright and kind girl, I was also a homely beanpole; tall and lean, a tomboy with thick glasses and an unbecoming haircut. Though a bit reserved when meeting someone for the first time, I warmed up quickly and enjoyed being a good friend.  In Wenatchee I was respected and well-liked.  Last year in sixth grade I’d been elected president of the student council at Lewis & Clark Elementary School, an honor I took seriously.  And after the exploits Mike and I had experienced the previous summer, I was primed and open for another adventure.

Every week-day Mike and I would straddle our bikes, streak down Main street and pump up Stadium Way to arrive at the WSC gymnasium or playing fields where we joined a sizable group of youngsters to be guided through a variety of outdoor sports.  Both Mike and I were active, athletic and strong team players.  Though we participated and engaged others, the friend scene in Pullman was different from any I had encountered before.  A few of the kids would smile and reply when I said ‘hi,’ but that was where it ended.  After camp, they went back to play with friends in their home neighborhoods.  We were not invited.   At the end of the day it was just Mike and me on our bikes careening around the empty parking lot behind Pullman High School, chasing a tennis ball and batting it to one another with our heavy wooden rackets.

The weekend after camp ended, Mom, Mike and I went to Lewiston to pick bushels of lovely ripe fruit.   The next morning, antsy for a project I asked Mom to teach me how to make peach pie.  She was pleased.  Everything I knew about cooking and baking I had learned from her.  She was an accomplished homemaker and loved to pass along her skills. Carefully I peeled off the fuzzy peach skins and sliced the fruit thinly into a crockery bowl.  Following the Betty Crocker recipe, I stirred in sugar and spices.  That was the easy part.  The crust was quite another matter.

Generations of women in my family had perfected the craft of pie crust construction; secrets of womanhood I was eager to master.  There was a certain magic in the quantity of each ingredient, the temperature and the proper blending of shortening with dry ingredients.  Especially important was learning to handle the dough correctly to keep it flaky and tender.  I divided the golden dough into unequal portions and gently rolled them into thin rounds.  The larger of these delicate sheets I carefully placed inside the pie tin pressing it lightly.  In went the peach mixture topped by the second round, its vents already cut through.  Mom showed me how to finish the edges with a thumbprint seal.  It was lovely.

In the cool of morning, those last hot days of our first summer in Pullman, Mom helped me feel competent, restored my belief in myself, and convinced me I was special.  In the process she eased me into the difficult transition from my comfortable girlhood in Wenatchee, to the roller-coaster vagaries of becoming a young adult in unknown territory.

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Bruised Apples (an analysis)

It had been decades since the sensation had hit me this hard, although I recognized it immediately.  I had just come out of the kitchen to join my sisters for morning coffee when, centered deep and low inside, the ache surged upward grabbed at my heart and caught in my throat.  I smiled to Lori and Diana, murmured a brief excuse, and walked the short path into Lori’s guest house.  Leaving the French door ajar I sank into the love seat beside the shaded windows beyond which my sisters talked quietly in the mild morning sun.  I closed my eyes, breathed deeply and wondered what had just happened to trigger this response? I’d never had this level of anxiety with my sisters before, though I’d felt it often with Mom and Diana when I was young.

Reflecting on those times an image of a downtown shopping trip came into sharp focus.  It was in Wenatchee and it was cold.  I was eleven and Diana was sixteen.  She and Mom were talking and laughing as the three of us ambled along the sidewalk.  I remembered how they brought their heads together to whisper some confidence then broke off in conspiratorial laughter.  I asked, “What?”  They answered with dismissive smiles, shaking their heads to wave me off.  Aware I was being excluded, a flush of confusion overcame me.  While they continued to chat and window shop, I trudged along pretending it didn’t matter.  But a cold sadness in my soul rushed through my body to emerge as hot tears in a constricted throat.  Lowering my head I walked ever more slowly until I lagged just far enough behind to appear to be in my own little world.  It was a coping mechanism I perfected over the years; self isolation in plain sight.

But what had just happened here, now, fifty plus years later?  What the hell had elicited this rush of fear-laced anxiety?  Perhaps it was how Lori and Diana sat with their heads bent towards one another when I approached them.  Maybe their conversation had shifted as I came closer; a sentence left to hang in the air, a slight change in voice tone, an eyebrow raised.  If they had been talking about me it would not be malicious; so why this intense reaction?  Why had my amygdala, that hardwired primal response center, temporarily taken over my ability to reason?  Why, doesn’t matter, I quietly soothed myself, the important thing is what I do now, how I go forward.  Having calmed myself sufficiently, I returned to the sunlit patio to finish coffee with my sisters.

Though I veiled its occurrence, the residue of my panic attack jangled within me throughout the day.  Determined to understand what had sparked it, I closely observed my own behavior: the words I used, my tone of voice, expressions, and gestures, and how others responded to me.  In the course of this examination I noticed how often Diana interrupted me.  When I started to contribute to the thread of conversation, before I could complete a thought she began talking right over me, rubbing my words into obscurity.  Am I really that invisible?  I wondered.  Is she even aware of what she’s doing, let alone conscious of how it hurts me? As the day progressed I remained present and involved, all the while aware of the interactive dynamic.  I listened, laughed, added tidbits and small observations, but made no effort to confront Diana’s interrupting behavior.  For that I would need to regain emotional energy and spiritual balance.  It would take courage and straight thinking.

That night as I mulled over what the day had taught me, I recognized that when I was a child it had been acceptable to dismiss me out of hand.  I was powerless and consequently withdrew into myself.  Fifty years later I no longer played life by those rules, but the residue of this ingrained interactive pattern remained with Diana and me.  Long ago I had shed the skin of passivity and consciously struggled to change my self-protective response pattern from passive-aggressive to assertive.  Yet with Diana I seemed to slip back into that submissive role, and it was up to me to break out of it.

The next morning while we sisters again sipped our coffee on the patio, I wanted to tell Lori that as far as I was concerned, she and Scott need not feel obligated to take us out to dinner tonight, an idea that had been floated the evening before.  As the discussion of what we would do today advanced, I repeatedly attempted to voice this thought, and every time I began to speak Diana talked over me.  Then calmly and assertively I interrupted her interruption. “I have been trying to get a word in edgewise Diana, please give me the courtesy of listening.”  For a moment there was tense silence.  “Lori,” I began, “I just want you to know that our visit here does not require a night out on the town to be successful.  It has been a wonderful time together, and speaking for myself I would be very content to have dinner here at your lovely home rather than go out somewhere.  It’s your call, but I want you to know I’m OK either way.”

Did I upset the applecart?  Yes.  Would we be able to establish a healthier relationship in the shifted dynamic I had precipitated?  Probably.  We had done so before.  I could tell it stung Diana when I confronted her.  Though taken aback she didn’t retaliate or pout overtly.  I’m quite sure others who also love her have helped Diana recognize when she is being overbearing.  Having successfully carried out this difficult but necessary task, as my adrenaline rush dissolved I began to feel a sense of relief, a lifting of my spirit.  Throughout the remainder of our visit, and in the months since returning home, my relationship with both sisters continues to be close and strong.  And if Diana and I ever slip back into that old pattern, I will face up to it in a heartbeat.

almost invisible

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