Progressive Street

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The mystery of love and death

Are you one of the lucky ones?

You know what you want to photograph, you go out, you shoot...and get it?

Perhaps you know what you want to write, you formulate, build a framework and fill with easy flowing prose.

Not me. I get ideas, I make plans but then the rest almost does it’s own thing. Uffa.

Anyway, thanks to a certain lady, I’ve rediscovered the pleasure of writing. More so, as I’m able to combine it with my passion for photography. I’ve already got a few stories and articles sketched out. But now...now the cogs are whirring in my mind, long forgotten memories are being drawn from the recesses of this strange machine we call the brain. Through this process, I recall a lot of my childhood. Much of it is happy, good memories. Occasionally though, something sadder grinds out of the machine:

THE GIRL IN THE WINDOW

I was young, wild of heart

Happy, most of the time

Happy enough not to understand why that little girl just looked dolefully at us from her bedroom window

At the age of seven, I could sense and feel something was awry

She was pale, sad looking

But there was a flicker of recognition from her, up in the window

I’d look out for her, as I trooped off with a mate or two, en route to that day’s joyous play

I’d think about her, half an ear to what my mate was saying

Be it joke or plans for when we got to wherever we were going

Then I’d forget her, get lost in events unfolding

Each time I’d insist we took same route past her house

The house of girl whose name I didn’t even know

One time we took a different route, for some reason

Feeling guilty, I insisted that we retraced our steps and went past that blue door of number 77

After a while, however, I stopped seeing her

No longer did her face appear in the window

Each time I’d look, pause and hope

Alas...

Some months later I gathered from hushed tones of adults, she’d been ill

Very ill

Sentenced to early grave by some disease I couldn’t comprehend

...She was just nine years old.

Progressive is photography based. If I want to write an article, I need shots to make it work; however laterally.

For this reason, I decided, on a blustery day, to drive into the wilds and visit a graveyard I’d always been intrigued by; nestled on the hillside, close to the shore of the lake. I’d driven past it many times. I’d even hiked past its low wall and cast iron railings but had no time to stop for photos.

I don’t know what I wanted. It wasn’t just about the little girl in the window. Maybe it was simply an excuse to get out and think about an article. I needed to feel my camera, heavy in my hands. With COVID19 threatening even this island nation, street photography doesn’t feel as safe as it used to.

I wasn’t looking to write about anything too heavy. We’ve all seen our share of suffering:

...casket too small of a cot death

...funeral of father barely known

…teenage bodies convulsed; sons a witness of mother’s early death

…torment of suicide, questions begging

It’s just that

…when you rush your mum to hospital, you wonder

...when people you care for are at risk of deadly disease, you wonder

...when life is gnawing away at your time on this earth and there’s still so much more to do, you wonder:

...how much those people mean to you

…how long they’ll be around

...if the last hug you gave them, was the last chance you had

...how will you defy the world’s strange turning and even meet up with some in the first place?

Normally I’d cross fingers for decent weather; dry and bright. Strangely enough, I didn’t worry about the weather’s clemency. No. If it was dark, grey, cloudy and even pouring down with rain, the foreboding nature would add to the atmosphere of my shots. If, on the other hand, it was sunny..as it turned out to be..all well and good. The light being the camera’s friend.

So it was that I visited the church grounds and after a quiet and respectful session, headed back to my car to warm up. Fingers thawed out, I decided to get some shots of the train stop, cross the tracks and focus on any memories that welled up from the lake. Good times, with my kids. Building dams across the rivulet; paddling; skimming stones on water’s surface...and such like. I felt ok; things were coming together. I chatted briefly with some picnickers and windsurfers into the bargain.

But my mind drifted:

No longer looking across the lake at the distant rolling hills

Or subconsciously scouting pebbles for skimmers

My mind turned to events far away

Far enough that there’s room for a channel, international border and more

But people so close

My mind switched to images seemingly surreal

A scene from some cheap movie perhaps

A scene depicting...

Workplaces closed

Restaurants barely opening doors

Shops risking contaminated custom

Elderly deprived of carers as the government introduces new laws

Permits required to cross town

Police enforcing roadblocks

City quarantined

A fear for loved ones

What’s more, things have changed radically, in just a week!

This is unreal.

Unprecedented.

Queues, curfews, permits and rationing.

Many of us have never experienced anything like it before in our lives!

Ordinarily, the time spent in a cemetery will be sobering.

Right now, events unfolding as they are, it’s almost a refuge

A time to reflect on love, life and death

Somehow easier because …

For the most part, these lives ended long ago

It’s the desperate uncertainty of today’s situation which haunts me!

So... my mind in turmoil, I’d rather go back to the cemetery, where you’ll find:

Soldiers lost in the rage of war

Partners and lovers, a life foreshadowed

Faithful husbands, loving wives

Pawned hearts, broken hearts

Matters not…

The headstones tell just what they were commissioned to tell

The sparsity of words their only excuse

Sorrow strewn twixt headstones

Celebration too

Ghosts tread grassy walk

However they fell, however, they are remembered

As a love lost to death’s cold grip

or a love cherished in memory’s warm grasp

LOVE UNDYING

These former walkers of the earth…

Do they all rest in their graves?

Settled spirits ... encased, entombed?

Or do some search for that lover, stolen by death’s embrace?

Wandering, wandering...

Some by day, skulking in sun’s shadows

Others...by night, more brazen neath moonlight.

Tell me spirit:

Why then this lifehold so strong?

Did you not feel script complete?

Are you searching for her still?

Beauty so alluring

Neck of porcelain swan

It’s length in kisses, still to count

It’s beauty framed by yoke of dress.

These were times gone by

Fashion reminiscent of some wonderland.

You wish to hook with finger

This ruffled neckline

The tug almost a caress…

To reveal the nape.

Kissing to count

To count its length

Oh...to kiss..each...

and every...

feather

Here’s something a little more upbeat, from the album that gave me my title: