Quite a lot of people, me included, are saying this pandemic is throwing a light on certain things – how fragile our systems of health care and social care, how poor the safety nets are, how interconnected the world is, how the instincts to collaborate and connect are so strong in human beings, how much we humans move around the Earth……[add you own here]
But today I stumbled across some old photos of reflections and I realised that the reflections are a different sort of light.
A direct light brightens and maybe even makes more clear the object it is shining on. That’s useful. Though it immediately brings to my mind that question I have about Scandi-noir crime drama – why does the (usually female) detective always go down into the basement or the abandoned warehouse at night, all alone, with just a torch to light up little bits of the room? Well, I suspect I know the answer to that one already.
Reflections are different.
They turn things upside down.
They give us an unusual and different take on reality, which lets us see beyond what the light is illuminating.
Look at this one, for example –
lily leaves on a still pond which is reflecting the blue sky and some clouds.
Or this one –
the edge of a Scottish loch where the still water is reflecting the clouds
Or, this one –
the solitary flamingo doubled by the water’s surface
In all these cases the reflection does something special I think.
It literally turns something upside down which immediately makes us look more carefully.
It changes our perspective whilst keeping our default one. In other words, it increases our perception and understanding by doubling our perspectives.
It shows us connections we were happy to ignore as long as we focused solely on the central subject. It connects the sky to the water, the water in the clouds to the water in the loch, for example, reminding us of these cycles and links and interconnections which are the most fundamental characteristic of Nature.
It increases our experience of beauty. Each of these photos could have been beautiful without the reflections, but I think that including the reflections make them exponentially more beautiful.
All of which brings me to my main thought today – shining a light on something helps us to understand it, promotes analysis and clarifies what has been obscure or forgotten. Reflecting adds in something completely different – it promotes our perception and understanding by changing our perspective, highlighting the connections, and increasing our senses of wonder and delight.
“And not or” is my moto – analyse and reflect. Actually, as I write that sentence I’m reminded of Iain McGilchrist’s Divided Brain thesis and how the left cerebral hemisphere is great for zooming in, analysing and cataloguing, while the right seeks out the connections, the specific and the unique.
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