Terror as Fashion

hetherington_01_nyc116981HBO is running a new documentary entitled Which Way Is the Front Line From Here? The Life and Time of Tim Hetherington.”  Hetherington was a photojournalist who spent almost his entire adult life photographing war and conflict.  He died in Libya in 2011.  NPR has an excellent summary of the documentary as well as many of Hetherington’s pictures . That’s one of his photos to the left.

The film is well worth your time.  Much of it focuses on a documentary by Hetherington and writer/producer Sebastian Junge  called “Restrepo.” It was nominated for an Academy Award.  The team embedded themselves for almost a year with a U.S. Army unit on the remote frontline in Afganistan, creating an intimacy that few war correspondents have been able to equal. An example of that intimacy can be seen in some surprisingly powerful pictures of soldiers engaged in the act of sleep.  These simple pictures of soldiers in deep slumber are as good as it gets in photography.

At one point in the HBO documentary Junge talks about the future that Hetherington never had.  Junge states that Hetherington was looking for a new project at the time of his death and that the photographer was absorbed with “the self referential idea about war in which soldiers in war see themselves in ways that are informed by the images of other soldiers in war and there is a conscious cycle of imitation going on.”

Perhaps it was because I saw this documentary in the same week as the Boston Marathon Bombing that I have focused so intently on those words and have found myself thinking about war and terror as fashion. Even though there was much about the Boston event that was unique it seemed, at least to me, that it was just the latest in a long line of “self referential” events that are “informed by the images of other[s]” and that there is a “conscious cycle of imitation going on.”  It is an almost perfect description of fashion.

The relentlessly looping pictures of the Tsarnaev brothers only served to underscore this thought.  There’s Tamerlan, the older brother, business like in his dark glasses, dark jacket, black cap pulled low and, of course, the black backpack.  He is not unlike the photos we saw of the 9/11 terrorists calmly making their way through “security”  on their way to transform airliners into modern day kamikaze  planes. And then there is Dzhokhar, suspect #2, so young and cocky in his swagger with the backwards baseball cap and backpack full of pain and death slung cavalierly across one shoulder.  We have all seen hundreds of Dzhokars on the streets in our hometown or on the nightly news with its video from Beirut, Damascus, or Bangkok.  The Tsarnaev brothers  were perfectly normal, nothing “out of the ordinary” young men. You could “photoshop” either one of them off of Bolyston Street and place them on almost any street in the world and our reaction would be the same — these two would blend in almost anywhere.

Similarly Hetherington’s pictures seem to capture the “average” young warrior (men and women) who are startlingly familiar. Too bad he didn’t have a chance to act on that idea for a new project.

Thankfully we still have the presence of Sebastian Junge who produced a heart rendering, thought provoking tribute to his friend in the HBO documentary. The film is filled with quotes and ideas that kept rumbling through my head in the past few days, so much so that it sent me back to HBO On Demand so I could re-watch certain sections of the documentary again.

Martin RichardAt one point there is an interview with another frontline journalist, James Brabazon, who talks about his grandfather’s experiences serving in India during World War II.  “War,” the old man told Brabazon, “is the only opportunity that men have in society to love each other unconditionally.”  That statement seems so sorrowful and yet, for so many, it is true. Surely it was unconditional love that we saw in the face of Dzhokar following his brother into the history books as they prepared to manufacture hell on Bolyston Street and utterly alter the lives of so many innocent people.  But it doesn’t have to be that way. There was also unconditional love in the bright, wide-eyed smile of an 8-year old holding a simple message, “No more hurting people.”  For those who wish for a sign — whether it be from Allah or Jesus Christ — they need look no further. ☙

Capturing a Moment

Myakka GroveTrying to “capture a moment” is a lot like “saving time.” We frequently use these expressions but, honestly, neither can be done. The best we can hope for is the illusion of achievement.  Photography is perhaps the best tool in this art of illusion.  Pictures give us the sense of freezing moments in time and their evocative nature often succeeds in transporting us back in our memories and resurrecting “that feeling.”

There is a particular grove of oak trees at Myakka River State Park.  It is pictured here. I yearn to capture the beauty of it with my camera and have taken countless pictures there. It is simply magnificent, no matter the time of year or the time of day.  It seems particularly gorgeous in its spring glory.  So I share this illusion with you, this moment of time captured in bits and bytes.  Happy spring everyone. ☙

My Buddy

Tango I have a new buddy…that’s him to the left. His name is Tango and he is a six-year-old Australian Shepherd. He came into my life in the most unexpected way.  He’s a service dog and his primary job is to make me walk.  I have two medical conditions that can benefit from vigorous walking therapy hypercoaguable blood–I can develop clots easily–and herniated and bulging spinal discs.  When I asked my doctor if it might be good to have a service animal she was enthusiastic and agreed to authorize it.

So, the next question was: what kind of dog?  Ideally I should walk 3-5 miles a day.  So Yorkies were out of the running as were most other small dogs. I was drawn to Aussies and talked it over with a friend who has bred and shown dogs. She thought an Aussie — the right Aussie — would be great.  She found a breeder in Orlando who was expecting a litter in the spring with summer placement of the puppies. That sounded ideal (I was thinking I wanted a puppy…not the smartest thought but that’s where I was). It was then that I began to learn about the world of breeding dogs.  In this case the female dog was going to be inseminated with sperm from a top-notch Aussie who lives in California.  I quickly realized we were talking about royalty and I can’t afford royalty.

But wait! Turns out this same breeder has a 6-year old Aussie, an obedience champion, fully trained and certified as a service dog–Tango! According to the breeder, Tango is “over it” when it comes to competition. He goes through the paces and does it all very well but … he’s tired of it. She had been looking “to place” him in a good home, a place where he could leave behind the pressures of competition.  In a sense, retire.  Well, I’m retired and looking for a service dog.  A perfect match?

Well, yes, it is. Tango and I have a great time together and we are walking a lot. Each of us has lost weight since he arrived (which is a good thing) and there are times when I’ll take him out and say, “Okay, just a short walk.” but we end up walking much more than I expected.  It is absolutely more fun to walk with a dog than it is to walk alone.

And he a great help with other things.  My spinal problems can cause instability, especially upon bending.  Tango gives a good assist in those situations. And he can pickup any item I tell him to.

When I learned last December that I had this hypercoaguable blood disorder I was a little low but life is funny.  There’s that saying about a door shutting but a window will open. There is also the lovely expression, “When life hands you lemons make lemonade.” I love lemonade…and I really love Tango.☙

At last! A job for the cat

Everyday I visit the Free Kibble website (www.freekibble.com) where they have an amusing trivia question about cats and dogs. Play the game and 10 pieces of Kibble are donated to rescue animals.  You don’t even have to get the right answer and 10 Kibble bits are donated.  What have you got to lose?

My cat - Rainbow.
My cat – Rainbow.

In today’s FreekibbleKat question I learned that for a year, a cat named Orlando chose stocks by throwing a toy at stock choices… and made more profit than the pros! Perhaps that explains the recent upturn in the market. The pros have stepped aside for the paws.

Now, all I have to do is teach  Rainbow, my cat, how to throw her toys… or I could keep buying the lottery tickets.

Spring in Florida … in January!

Well, some say the jury is still out on the Global Warming issue but here in Florida it is warm and it is spring.  January is not yet gone and the azaleas in my subdivision are in bloom … about six weeks earlier than usual.  I saw a report on the news the other evening about a small, seaside town in New Jersey that was devastated by Hurricane Sandy.  The mayor is lobbying for regulations that will force all new buildings to be built about 10 feet off the ground. She has plenty of data to show that the seashore is eroding and any future storms will wreak the same havoc as Sandy so by her reckoning if people want to rebuild they should do so in a realistic manner.  Could we please send this mayor to Congress?

Sir David Attenborough proclaimed recently that humans are a plague on the earth.  I couldn’t agree more.  There are too many of us and global warming is one result.  It’s easy to get depressed about it all but that doesn’t help. I really don’t know what does help but for me it is hiking the beautiful land at Myakka River State Park.  I find things, like this Century Oak tree.  Well, I call it a Century Oak but that’s only because it looks like another oak that someone told me was a Century Oak.  Perhaps we should just call it a Magnificent Oak and leave it at that.

Century Oak (1)

Do you like the AIDS Quilt?

Of course you like the AIDS Memorial Quilt. Now you demonstrate that with a simple click of the mouse.  Read on …

In October 1992 The Names Project brought the AIDs Quilt to the Washington Mall.  Panels of love and remembrance for those who had died from AIDS covered the hill that holds the majestic Washington Monument and then stretched westward down the Mall to the sobering Lincoln Memorial.

The AIDS Quilt on the Washington Mall, October 1992.
The AIDS Quilt on the Washington Mall, October 1992.

It was estimated that more than 200,000 people visited the Mall that weekend!  Robert and I, along with a handful of volunteers, manned an exhibit table for our group MARS (Marijuana AIDS Research Service).  All of us came away changed.  I don’t know that I will ever be in a place again where there was so much love.  It was almost palpable.

It was the third time I had seen the Quilt and each time it rocked me to my  soul. It is a brilliantly conceived work of art.  Part remembrance, part protest, totally love.

I recently had occasion to visit The Names Project website.  They maintain the Quilt which, at last count,  has 48,000 panels.

As I scrolled through the website I encountered the ubiquitous “Like” button for Facebook.  I was shocked to see only 3, 440 had taken the time to “Like” the Quilt.  Can we improve on this folks?  Please?  It doesn’t take much time and it doesn’t cost a cent.  The good folks at The Names Project deserve better than this.  AIDS may have faded from the spotlight but it is still out there and The Quilt helps keep that fact present in our hearts and minds.

Here is the link:  http://www.aidsquilt.org.  Just click on the link and you’ll go to the Names Project website.  Scroll to the bottom of the page and click the “Like” button.  And then please ask a friend to do the same.

Thanks.

Fawn Hill – A New Adventure Begins

It has been quite a year but on Friday, December 14th there was a definite high note.  On that day my sister and I acquired an acre of land in Franklin, North Carolina.    The land has a large (3 bedroom, 2 bath) modular home, a shed, a satellite dish, three apple trees, and a backyard with a zealous population of poison ivy.

Our new home on Fawn Hill
Our new home on Fawn Hill

It sits on Fawn Hill.  The elevation is about 2,000 feet.  A nice change from sea level. At the top of the Hill lives my friend Boni and her partner Gail plus Gail’s cousin Suzy and Boni’s 90+ mother, Lola.  Boni and Gail acted as our agents at the auction.  Doris and Bob also live on Fawn Hill. We haven’t met them yet. They showed up at the auction  to make sure no riffraff bought the place.  I hope we pass muster.

I’ve dreamed of owning some land for a long while.  The four properties that I’ve owned have all been condominiums.  Where there are condos there are Boards of Directors.  It is wonderful to think of owning a home and land that has just two restrictions:  1)  keep the right of way open to the neighbors, and 2) don’t build a mobile home park.  No problem.

DSC_0343
Marty, Gail & Boni on the right-of-way to Fawn Hill. Our new place is on the left.

Closing will be around the end of the year.  There are ten days for an “upset bid” to be made.  We’re hopeful that won’t happen but we’re pretty sure the riffraff won’t upset the process.  ☙

Kermit’s Cousin on the Myakka Prairies

For the last couple of weeks I have been exploring the Park outside of the Park.  This is mainly prairie land located east of the main entrance to Myakka River State Park.  Since I normally drive in from the West side of the Park these areas had never really registered in my consciousness.  Another deterrent was a seemingly endless road repair process that was ongoing just east of the Park entrance.

In my quest for pine lillies a few weeks back, however, I followed a lead to one of these eastern gates and began wandering around.  I wouldn’t want to be out there in July but right now it is very sweet.  Wildflowers are everywhere in the scrub, and the wild grasses are in full “bloom.”  To those who say Florida doesn’t have a colorful Autumn I invite them to visit the Myakka prairies in the late day sun.  It is an artist’s palette.

The  tracks are mainly service roads but the pigs and other critters have made single tracks that lead off the roads and into the scrub. I was making my way through some of the scrub on Saturday, watching my step because the scrub roots are treacherous. From the corner of my eye I saw what I thought was a leaf falling… sideways.   Whoa!  Leaves do not “fall” sideways.  I looked down and saw this guy. 

A lime-green frog!  Very much the color of the scrub. He landed in a hole next to some burned scrub.  Of course my camera did not have the right lens on it for this occasion but I did the best I could, absolutely certain Kermit’s cousin would take one hop and be gone.

But he didn’t.  Turned out he was quite a poser but, alas, he had not chosen the best of stages.  He was about 3 inches below me and there was debris everywhere.  I kept snapping and clearing away…snapping and clearing away…snapping and clearing away.

He suffered this poor fool of a photographer very graciously.  After doing the best I could with the wide-angle lens I reached into the kit for my macro lens.  “This will do it,” I thought.  “He’s out of here.”

But no!  He hung around and soon I was on all fours. Well, make that all threes because one hand was holding the camera, trying to get into the right angle, feeling like a pretzel, hoping I wasn’t putting any appendage into an ant hill, and wondering if I would ever be able to extract myself.  The best picture of the day would probably have been a picture of me taking a picture of the frog.

All turned out okay and here is the best shot I could get of this wonderful treasure.  I believe he is a Squirrel Treefrog.  Just another of the jewels at Myakka. ❧

God Bless the Garbage Collectors

I was hiking around in my favorite place yesterday.  (That’s Myakka River State Park for those who are infrequent readers of my blog. )  I was heading down All-Weather Rd. at a fairly good clip, intent on getting to a trail that I had not visited in some time.  I’m not sure why I looked down but perhaps the angel on the shoulder of this Rainbow Scarab Dung Beetle cried out because my big right foot was heading right towards him.  He would have been a goner and I would have been the one who was truly crushed to have injured or killed such an incredible creature.

The Rainbow Scarab Dung Beetle is very aptly named.  He does seem to have all the colors of the rainbow on him.  He is certainly a scarab (the big horn and bright colors confirm that).  And that is a big piece of dung that he is pushing around.

I quickly dropped my gear and got down to eye level with this critter.  Have you ever seen such a thing?  He certainly is the best dressed garbage collector I’ve ever seen.  Dung beetles collect what most of us consider disgusting — excrement.     They serve us all by collecting and using the dung of animals for food and as a repository for their eggs.   In other words, they help make the dung go away.  This one was a roller and I read that dung beetles can roll up to 10 times their weight.  Other dung beetles pull their bounty and some are capable of pulling 1,141 times their own body weight: the equivalent of an average person pulling six double-decker buses full of people!  What a creature!  Humans have long been captivated by them.  At least that’s what the reference sources say.  There are even beetle dung derbies!

So, that’s what was happening at Myakka yesterday.  Creatures going about their business, never realizing just how fantastic they are and never getting even a nod of recognition from most of us.  So, I want everyone who reads this to look at this final dung beetle picture and say, with sincerity, “Thanks for cleaning up the s#!t.”  You’ll feel better for having done so.  😉 ❧

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