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Archive for the ‘from the dark room’ Category

I took a wander around the castle rock in Stirling the other day, following a path called “The Back Walk”. I took my camera of course, and here’s something I saw which captured me.

the liberal man

Why did this capture me? Well, my father’s father was a shoemaker, as was his father before him, and back through the generations. In Stirling, where my ancestors lived and worked, as far back as the 16th century there were “seven incorporated trades” – hammermen, weavers, tailors, shoemakers, skinners, bakers, and fleshers. I’ve heard my dad talk about his father belonging to the “seven incorporated trades”.

This plaque raised many questions for me.

Here’s my first question……what were the incorporated trades? Well, I found this succinct description –

The power to grant incorporated status to trades rested with the magistrates of royal burghs. An incorporated trade was granted the right to monopolise and control their trade within the burgh. Trade incorporations were usually constituted by a seal of cause granted by the magistrates but some were constituted by use and consuetude. A strict monopoly was enforced within the burgh and non-members of an incorporation were not allowed to trade within the bounds of the town. The Incorporation set strict guidelines controlling the quality of workmanship and protected work for the craft within the burghs against outsiders. It prevented apprentices from being drawn away from their masters and controlled standards of craftsmanship amongst its members. An entry fee had to be paid to gain admission. The son of a burgess paid the lowest fee, the son-in-law of a burgess paid more and a stranger paid the highest fee. Trades incorporations were usually governed by a deacon with the aid of a boxmaster and a council of craftsmen who were elected annually. They held a court which could fine craftsmen for contravening the rules and held the ultimate penalty of expulsion. The trades often incorporated with others to form united trades who had a right to representation in the council of the burgh along with representatives from the merchant guild. The representation on the council by trades and merchants was abolished in 1833 by the Royal Burghs (Scotland) Act (3 & 4 Will. IV, c.76) which provided for an elected town council. The exclusive privileges of trade were in decline towards the latter half of the eighteenth century and were finally abolished in 1846 by the Abolition of Exclusive Privilege of Trading in Burghs in Scotland Act (9 & 10 Vict., c.17). Thereafter the functions of the Incorporation were purely charitable: many incorporations were already providing assistance and financial relief to their members

And here’s my second question…..that quotation about liberal men devising liberal things….I find that incredibly appealing, but when I searched for the source, I discovered it was from Isaiah 32:8 and only in the King James translation is it written as “liberal” (which I took to mean “generous“). In other translations it’s “noble” (which actually doesn’t seem so appealing to me!) Can anyone explain this difference? Because, to me, “liberal” and “noble” don’t mean the same thing at all.

I’ve got a third question. Do you know what “Tempori parendum” means? I do. It was sewn into the top pocket of our blazers at Stirling High School. It means “We must move with the times”.

This simple inscription touched me. Here it is, erected by the seven incorporated trades, of which my ancestors were members. It’s placed on the wall of the old High School, which my mother went to (the later one being the school I attended).  It commemorates the building of a hospital to care for the infirm and sick members of the trades, and here I am several generations later, a doctor who cares for the sick and the infirm.

Wow! I stood below this plaque for a while and felt a deep sense of awe at the threads and roots I could feel tugging at me, from the long distant past, connecting me, in so many different ways, through history, geography and blood.

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letting the grass grow

When was the last time you just stopped, sat yourself down in some grass, and listened to the sound of wind swishing through lush, swaying, blades?

Can’t remember?

Do it soon.

(What’s that? It’s only grass? Have you ever really looked? Have you ever really taken the time to listen?)

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mega display of sewing machines
mega display of sewing machines

mega display of sewing machines
mega display of sewing machines

I walked past the old Borders store in Glasgow the other day and had to stop when I saw all the windows lined with hundreds of sewing machines. The shop is being converted into a clothes store. I don’t know if the sewing machines will stay, or if they’re just a screen while they set up the store.

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bird on the wire

bird on the wire

What’s that I hear?
Stop.
Look up.
Zoom in.
Bird song……..little birds, big sounds, instantly……..I hear this…….

Sometimes when the past comes crashing into the present it’s a wholly pleasant experience.

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Do you ever look up for a moment and watch a bird flying?

It’s amazing how fast some of them can fly…..

flight

If you can capture one midflight with your camera you can see the incredible positions of their wings as they beat the air..

flight

Then, look at this one, HOVERING! Just hanging there way above the waves, those tiny eyes keenly spotting the movements of the fish under the water, ready just to plummet instantly like a stone, and capture its prey…

flight

Now, look……..see how they look when they fly together…

formation flying

formation flying

formation flying

Take a look today. You’ll be amazed

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see the light

see the light

I know…..it’s an odd concept to actually see the light. We see what the light illuminates, but it’s quite hard to say we can actually see the light itself. C S Lewis wrote a story about a blind man who begins to see and goes around asking people to show him the light he’d kept hearing about when he was blind. Nobody can show him the light, only the sources of the light. Lewis used this idea to illustrate the difference between two forms of contemplation when he wrote about noticing a beam of sunlight coming in through a crack in his shed door, and stepping into that light to look along the beam itself. Nice image, interesting idea.

I took these two photos through my kitchen window the other evening because I was struck by just how different the light appeared. There’s definitely something about experiencing a different light.

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That pesky Icelandic volcano’s ash might be causing huge and recurring disruption of air travel, but it’s bringing us some spectacular sunsets.

Here’s one

volcanoes and sunsets

volcanoes and sunsets

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nothing but the rain

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As I walked through Ueno Park in Tokyo on sunday morning this shrine caught my eye –

shrine

I went for a closer look once this young woman had moved on.

firebird

Goodness, isn’t this just amazing? I looked more carefully at the flickering flame –

firebird

I had no idea what this was all about but I found it completely captivating. At the base of the shrine was marble onto which the shadows of the overhead leaves played looking for all the world like fleeting reflections of the kanji letters below the dove with the flame.

reflection

Yesterday I asked the students if they knew what this was, and they told me that it was to commemorate those who died in Hiroshima and Nagasaki, and that the flame was a continuous flame which stretched right back to the fires in those cities after the bomb fell.

Then this morning, outside my hotel room door, I find the Daily Yomiuri and look what’s on the front page –

daily yomiuri

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feather plant

I’ve been thinking about imagination.
I’m updating my knowledge of neuroscience at the moment and learning a lot about brain function and the mental processes from the perspective that a definition of mind would be “an embodied, inter-relational process of regulation of energy and information flow”. That’s a wonderfully dynamic and holistic model of the mind. The brain in this model is the organ which produces the mind, and on which the mind acts, and we can see how energy and information flows around the brain, between the brain and the rest of the body, and between brains.

Given that the brain has 100 billion neurons and that each neuron has up to 10,000 connections, the number of distinct brain states (where each neuron is either “on” or “off”) is as great as the number of known stars in the universe!

Each brain state represents an act of remembering, perceiving and imagining – all at once!

So, what’s this imagining process? I’ve been wondering if it’s the process of making connections – of putting elements together to make a pattern. Those patterns might represent what we’ve already experienced, what we are currently experiencing, or, perhaps even more astonishingly, ones which nobody has ever experienced…..not even ourselves!

Remembering is a creative act. Perceiving is a creative act. Both involve focusing the imagination. In the former, we focus it on the past, and in the latter, we focus it on the present. But when we focus imagination on either the future, or use it to play with the patterns inside our own minds, then we make new connections – like seeing these feathers on this plant and imagining a feather-plant……ah that’s where feathers come from! That must be why we find birds in trees and bushes so often….they’re collecting feathers to cover their bodies and make their wings so they can fly!

See how easy it is to get your imagination flowing when you make connections?

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