Tuesday, February 9, 2016

One major lie and a lot of truth

Bird by bird has one of biggest lies in history. It is crazy to think that this book is used in an educational environment. I think that there are or should be charges filed against the author. Everyone knows that strawberry jam is the best way to make a PB&J, not GRAPE! Get it right! Now that that's out of the way, we can move on.

I like how the school lunch chapter discussed something that is very familiar to millions of people and used it in an illustrative way for the writing process. Actually, it really fits into any creative process. Writing seems to be the best way to get an analogy to fit with something else. Most people learn to write before they learn to photograph, draw seriously, create music etc. Since we start with writing it is something that is more familiar to more people. Once something is related to writing, it can then be related to other fields.

The Polaroid chapter took a dark turn for me. I really enjoyed the concept of a Polaroid developing in phases. It isn't visible all at once. It seems as if someone is adding to a painting one layer at a time. The author described the child against the fence, then family appearing, and then the baboons with lashing teeth. It made me think of how we often see people and think we know their story or what their story will be and sometimes we pass on someone because we don't think it is worth our time or it isn't interesting enough. It really made me brought me down for a little bit. Maybe it was a combination of the music that was playing while I was reading the chapter. I don't know. Whatever the cause or combination of causes was, it really got me thinking. It made me think of a quote that I heard years ago. I don't know why it made me think of this, and I am not sure if it even applies, but here it is.

“Wanna make a monster? Take the parts of yourself that make you uncomfortable — your weaknesses, bad thoughts, vanities, and hungers — and pretend they’re across the room. It’s too ugly to be human. It’s too ugly to be you. Children are afraid of the dark because they have nothing real to work with. Adults are afraid of themselves.”
- Richard Siken

It also made me think of this one as well.

“The Edge...There is no honest way to explain it because the only people who really know where it is are the ones who have gone over. The others-the living-are those who pushed their control as far as they felt they could handle it, and then pulled back, or slowed down, or did whatever they had to when it came time to choose between Now and Later. But the edge is still out there.” 
- Hunter S. Thompson

The chapter in On Being a Photographer about selecting a subject had one point that really caught my attention. I am not sure if it was the intent of the authors to have such an emphasis this, but it was like a flashing light to me. In the chapter, they stated that the study of the history of photographer is really about subjects. This applies to other mediums besides photography as well. But, when we are talking about photographers, we define their abilities of how they covered X or how they photographed Y. It is an interesting way to analyze a person - by discussing their work. It happens everyday and in almost every facet of life, but do we ever really think about it. It links back to a line in the Tao of Photography. It talked about someone becoming what they photograph. In a sense, becoming inseparable from their work. If someone speaks ill of their work, it is taken as an insult to their character.

Another part of the chapter that I liked was how they discussed people asking them to "give specific advice on the choice of subject matter." What I took from this was that we, as photographers and also just as human beings, should start looking at subjects not as a noun, but as a verb. Stay with me on this. All too often, we look at subjects as objects. They can be people or places, but they are still a thing; something that is tangible. However, after reflecting on this chapter, I feel that we, or at least I, should start looking at what we photograph as different experiences. Now this could still fall into that noun realm, but it's all in the mindset going in. The transitive verb form of "subject" is "to expose or render vulnerable." This shouldn't be looked at as being a negative. The photographer should have themselves in their work so they can learn and grow from each experience. (Obviously with regard to ethical considerations).

"Now I want to propose another idea all together... The real you, is not a puppet which life pushes around. The real you, the real deep down you, is the whole universe. You cannot confine yourself to what happens inside the skin. Your skin doesn't separate you from the world, it's a bridge. But just as a magnet polarizes its-self in north and south but its all one magnet, so experience polarizes itself as "Self" and "Other", but it's all one. What you call the "External world" is as much YOU as your own body. Most people think that when they open they're eyes and look around that what they are seeing is outside... it seems, doesn't it, that you are behind your eyes. We haven't realized that life and death, black and white, good and evil, being and non-being, come from the same center. When you look for your own particularized center of being which is separate from everything else, you wont be able to find it. The only way you'll know it isn't there is if you look hard enough, to find out that it isn't there. It isn't there at all, there isn't a separate you. There are, in physical reality, no such things as separate events. People can't be talked out of illusions. If a person believes that the earth is flat, you can't talk him out of that, he knows that it's flat. He'll go down to the window and see that its obvious, it looks flat. So the only way to convince him that it isn't is to say, "Well let's go and find the edge." 
- Nothing More "Pyre" Excerpts from lectures by Alan Watts 

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