From my living room window today I saw this little trail of snow on top of Ben Ledi so grabbed my camera (can’t tell you how long it’s been since Ben Ledi was visible from my window – we’ve had days of wild winds and rain or thick, heavy mists hiding the mountains).
What often catches me by surprise are the really obvious things in the picture which I only see when I put it up on the mac and just didn’t notice at all as I pointed my camera and clicked. First of all look at that huge, heavy, water-laden cloud up there! How didn’t I see that?! But look also at the bird in flight – isn’t that beautiful? You couldn’t manufacture a shot like that. I love that about photography – how it can raise our awareness and deepen our perception of the world. I swear I look at the world differently when I’ve been looking at photos and/or when I’ve got one of my cameras in my hand. It’s a kind of second sight…..you see it once, then you see it better!
Archive for the ‘from the dark room’ Category
Second sight
Posted in creativity, from the dark room, photography on February 24, 2008| 4 Comments »
Imagination – how we make worlds
Posted in creativity, from the dark room, photography on February 23, 2008| 6 Comments »
I took this photo of an amaryllis (ok, actually it’s probably not truly an amaryllis, but actually Hippeastrum) recently and when I looked at it once I’d uploaded it to my mac, it brought back to my mind a Hermann Hesse fairy tale I read back in my teens (yep, well over three decades ago!). Sometimes you read a novel, or a story, or a poem and it makes such an impression that it stays with you for life. I read a lot of Hesse when I was a teenager and one of my most favourite was (and still is) his collection of fairy stories – “Strange News from Another Star”. One of the stories in that collection is “Iris”. What I remember about that story is how the young boy imagines a whole world inside the Iris flower in the garden and later in life when he has lost touch with that whole way of experiencing life he falls for a woman named “Iris” who challenges him to go back and find what he had lost. I got my old copy off the bookshelf and the moment I started to read, the old magical feeling came back.
In the morning when he came out of the house, fresh from sleep and dreams and strange worlds, there stood the garden waiting for him, never lost yet always new, and where yesterday there had been the hard blue point of a blossom tightly rolled, staring out of its green sheath, now hung thin and blue as air a young petal with a tongue and a lip, tentatively searching for the curving form of which it had long dreamed. At the very bottom where it was still engaged in a noiseless struggle with its sheath, delicate yellow growth was already in preparation, the bright veined path and the far-off fragrant abyss of the soul. Perhaps as early as midday, perhaps by evening, it would open, the blue silk tent would unfold over the golden forest, and her first dreams, thoughts, and songs would be breathed silently out of the magical abyss.
I don’t think I ever looked at a flower the same way after reading that. Oh how I love those images – of the flower “tentatively searching for the curving form of which it had long dreamed” and of it “breathing silently out” its’ dreams, thoughts and songs.
When he stared into her chalice and in absorption allowed his thoughts to follow that bright dreamlike path between the marvellous yellow shrubbery towards the twilight interior of the flower, then his sole looked through the gate where appearance becomes a paradox and seeing a surmise. Sometimes at night too he dreamed of this flowery chalice, saw it opening gigantically in front of him, like the gate of a heavenly palace, and through it he would ride on horseback, would fly on swans, and with him flew and rode and glided gently the whole world drawn by magic into the lovely abyss, inward and downward, where every expectation had to find fulfilment and every intimation came true.
Each phenomenon on earth is an allegory, and each allegory is an open gate through which the soul, if it is ready, can pass into the interior of the world where you and I and day and night are all one. In the course of his life, every human being comes upon that open gate, here or there along the way; everyone is sometime assailed by the thought that everything visible is an allegory and that behind that allegory live spirit and eternal life. Few, to be sure, pass through the gate and give up the beautiful illusion for the surmised reality of what lies within.
Goodness, it is so many years since I last read those words but they feel as vibrant, stimulating and inspiring as they ever did. What a fabulous capacity we human beings have for imagination and creativity! How amazing is the tool of “allegory”? Isn’t it incredible how it turns what seems to be into something so much more? How it unlocks the potential that lies in everything. Wonderful! I’m off to re-read some more Hesse!
Meanwhile, here are a couple of other lily family photos I’ve taken – an iris I saw in Holland once, and a daylily from Rodin’s garden in Paris – hey, that should inspire your imagination a bit!
Inside and out – contrasting environments
Posted in from the dark room, photography on February 17, 2008| 4 Comments »
When I was recently in Japan I was teaching in a building in Akihabara. I was struck, as I often am in Japan, by the contrasts between the exterior and interior environments.
Around the building the streets looked like this (all these photos taken from inside the building)
And inside the building it looked like this (again all photos taken inside the same building)
Flower bed in Ikebukuro
Posted in from the dark room, photography on February 12, 2008| 8 Comments »
Isn’t this an interestingly different flower bed in the middle of the busy Ikebukuro district of Tokyo?
A view of the hills
Posted in from the dark room, photography on February 11, 2008| 4 Comments »
I like to look out onto the hills every morning. You’ve maybe seen some of my photos that I’ve taken from my living room windows. In Tokyo, it’s not so easy to see the hills but when I looked really to the side out of my hotel room window, I could see them. Oh, yes, there they are!
The home of electronics?
Posted in from the dark room, photography on February 9, 2008| 2 Comments »
As the sun set over Tokyo I snapped this photo of the coppery-reddish sunlight illuminating this office block. It looked like a massive silicon chip or computer motherboard and, somehow, I thought that was really apt.
Sky high window cleaning
Posted in from the dark room, photography on February 8, 2008| 2 Comments »
I looked out of the window of my 18th floor hotel room in Tokyo and saw these guys cleaning the windows.
I loved the glass, the reflections and the sight of the two men perched up there…..I wonder how long it takes them to clean ALL those windows?
Human beings – wired for change!
Posted in from the dark room, perception, photography on January 19, 2008| 3 Comments »

I’ve been to game reserves in South Africa a few times. I tell you, until you’ve been yourself, you’ve no idea how difficult it is to spot an elephant or a giraffe! Seriously! Huge big animals but in their natural habitat, really they’re not easy to spot. What gives them away? Movement. As you scan the bush, or a plain, or a hillside, the first thing which will catch your eye is a movement. If they stay stock still, they might be only yards away but you won’t see them till the last minute.





Many animals are good at detecting scent change. The slightest whiff of a predator, or a human being, arriving on the scene and they pick it up.
Another example of how we give priority to change detection is noise. I’m sure you’ll have had the experience of a background noise suddenly stopping and it’s only at that moment when it ceases that you become aware it was even there. You notice it when it goes away, not when it stays the same.
Change impacts on us. It catches our attention. A recent study has examined this phenomenon and interestingly shows that we are much better at detecting auditory changes than visual ones. I’m not sure that holds true for everyone. One of the things that NLP teaches is how we have different processing preferences – by that they mean that some of us are especially good at processing visual information, others auditory, and yet others, kinesthetic. From what I can see the researchers who produced this study didn’t make any allowances for that.
Local hero – Wallace
Posted in from the dark room, life, photography on January 18, 2008| 2 Comments »
One of the most frequently viewed posts on this blog is my photograph of Stirling Castle and Wallace Monument. As you might imagine, both of these structures sitting atop hills looking over the town of Stirling, have made a big impression on me over the years. I was born here, worked here in the local hospital in my training years and have returned to live here in recent years. You’re probably familiar with the Wallace, who the monument commemorates, either from history lessons, or from the movie, Braveheart. (Mel Gibson doesn’t look a bit like the real Wallace by the way!).
In the middle of the town of Stirling is a cobbled street that climbs a steep hill to the Castle. The first part is called “King Street” and at the top of King Street is this statue
As you’ll see from the carved writing, this is Wallace. If you look a little more carefully, you can see a few words in Latin – “nemo me impune lacessit”. It’s the motto of Scotland and translated into Scottish it says “Wha daur tangle wi me!” (roughly in English that means “Don’t mess with me!”)
Have you a local hero? Have you a motto?
The shape of water
Posted in from the dark room, photography on December 30, 2007| Leave a Comment »
If you look here, you’ll be able to see a short slide show of a single wave. Well, what is a “single” wave actually? What I did was set the camera to continuous take and held the button for a wee bit.
What I love is the constant change. Yet even within that constant change we can see something that seems to remain the same and name it – a wave………..somehow, like a piece of water, (if there ever could be such a thing). Life’s like this, isn’t it? We’re like this, aren’t we? Constantly changing, shifting, growing, moving, yet having something I can name and know as “me”….
















