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Archive for the ‘photography’ Category

I finished reading William Fiennes, The Snow Geese, this morning, then as I looked out of my window I saw this sight

flying south

I followed them round to the other side of my house….

flying south

I don’t really know what to make of these “coincidences” in life, but they certainly heighten the sense of emerveillement in le quotidien……

I really enjoyed ‘The Snow Geese’. It’s one of those books I’ve had lying around for a long time, but only recently decided to read. It has that wonderful combination of beautiful writing and fascinating, thought provoking facts, which I love. The main themes of the book, based around the writer following snow geese as they head north to their breeding grounds, are about freedom, our connection with nature, and the strong instincts to head home (migratory birds have two homes really…..one for the summer and one for the winter).

What I didn’t expect to find were some references to homesickness from a medical perspective, and, given that I’m a doctor, it should be no surprise that those passages leaped out at me.

Baron Dominique Jean Larrey, Inspector of Health of the French armies under Napoleon [described nostalgia in the following terms] First, an exaggeration of the imaginative faculty: patients thought of their homes as enchanting and delightful, and expected to see relatives and friends advancing towards them. Second, the appearance of physical symptoms: fever, gastric disturbance, ‘wandering pains’. Finally, depression, listlessness, weeping, and sometimes suicide.

How fascinating to see this holistic description and understanding, beginning with an individual’s inner, subjective, mental processes, leading onto whole body dysfunction with specific disorders in certain organs and systems, then progressing to a life-threatening state of mind. What cures did such doctors suggest? Larrey recommended distraction – through “music, recreation and regular exercise”.

In 1858, James Copland, in his ‘Dictionary of Practical Medicine’, described nostalgia as a cause of disease, rather than as a disease itself (where does a disease begin? Can you really say where health gives way to disease?) However, he still considered it to be a serious problem.

The patient nurses his misery, augments it until it destroys his nightly repose and his daily peace, and ultimately devours, with more or less rapidity, his vital organs.

Fiennes quotes from a 1996 edition of Psychological Medicine ….

What strikes one most in the sparse literature on help for the homesick is that often only returning to the old home environment brings real relief.

Well, well, well…..how often is it the case that the solution to a problem is to deal with the problem?! I know that seems obvious, but if it’s so obvious why do we persist in using drugs which merely mask symptoms as first line treatments for so many problems?

I’m particularly struck by the holistic, contextually bound understanding of the nature of homesickness in these works. How have we allowed the practice of medicine to decline to its currently dehumanised, mechanistic form? A doctor must understand the narrative context of a patient’s illness to arrive at a correct “diagnosis”, not just hunt a lesion and divide illness into real or imaginary, organic or functional. A person can only be fully understood as a whole person, body, mind and spirit, inextricably embedded in their unique physical and semantic environments……and, so, “cures” should be based on this perspective rather than the diminished, reductionist one, shouldn’t they?

We are connected. Intimately, complexly connected. ‘The Snow Geese’ reminds us how connected all creatures are to their environments and to the rhythmic change of the seasons. Good to be reminded of that in this snow and ice bound December in Scotland.

How are you going to spend your wintering?

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Look what I saw on my way to work this morning….

lunar solstice eclipse over stirling castle

There hasn’t been a total lunar eclipse on the winter solstice since 1638. Pretty special to get to see it today!

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The French have two words which when considered together actually create a great philosophy of living.
Emerveillement
and
Quotidien.

Emerveillement is a kind of wonder, amazement, awe, I suppose. It’s a completely enlivening disposition. The more we can encounter life from a position of wonder, the more wonder-ful life becomes.
Quotidien means the everyday. To live with a focus on the quotidien is to live in the now. It’s a way of being present.

Imagine how good it feels to be present and to find the present wonder-ful……

In this last week, here in Scotland, we’ve been surrounded by ice and snow. Here’s one single ice crystal, growing from the tiniest point of moisture under this iron bar….

one crystal

Isn’t it amazing? Isn’t it wonderful? Isn’t it awe-inspiring how such beauty is created right before our everyday eyes?

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Snow and fog

cambusbarron

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cold calling

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Ice nymph

ice nymph

……amazing what little creatures you can find in the average hedge……

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snow cave in the hedge

Do you remember finding a hollow in a tree when you were a child and imagining a whole world in there? Scotland’s folk culture is rich with stories of fairies, strange lights appearing at night, selkies and other such other-worldly creatures. I always enjoyed imagining the miniature world that I could conjure up in such dark and interesting natural places. So when I was looking at the snow on the hedge outside this week I suddenly noticed the sunlight shining through intricate passageways in the snow………worlds within worlds.

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rainbow icicles

I swear I look out my window every day and never see exactly the same scene twice. If you browse through this blog, you’ll find lots of examples of that – the ever changing scene of Ben Ledi, the cloud patterns, the rich variety of sunsets and of dawns.
This morning I looked outside and saw something I’ve never seen before – from the roof of an adjacent building the long icicles catching the sunlight just like a rainbow maker, sparkling with colour.

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ben ledi misty autumn

ben ledi winter

…taken exactly two weeks apart I think these photos show the change of the season from autumn to winter

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autumn colour

and…..

pink

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