Monday, October 10, 2016

The Seanchai Within

by Carol





Did you ever consider that within your photography you are part of a long tradition of story telling? 

This was brought to my mind recently while listening to Elizabeth Gilbert's Magic Lessons podcast. She was counseling a woman named Colleen, who wanted very much to join the story telling movement - people who literally take the stage to tell their stories. (You might be familiar with public radio's broadcast called The Moth Story Hour, or with the podcast called Mortified, in which people (hilariously) read their childhood diaries out loud.) Colleen was struggling because her first generation parents came from Ireland and worked hard to establish themselves in this country, and to afford their children college educations. Her father eventually owned a bar in Philadelphia, and with working in that bar for years, and having a very large family, she felt that she was chock full of stories. However, she was stuck working in finance in New York, and her heart was longing for expression. Yet simultaneously she felt that she would be letting her family down if she gave up all the things they had allowed her to attain and ran off to tell stories.

You really should listen to the whole podcast. I love the way that, each week, Elizabeth listens through all the concerns  that keep people from creating, and boils them down to the nitty gritty. In this case, she prefaced her advice by saying that this is not an "all or nothing" situation. As many of us here at FOL can relate to, Colleen could use her career to support her creative habit. She could perform, join groups, travel and pursue your art while still supporting herself and using her education. 


But I was more interested in the way Liz Gilbert delved into the story-telling tradition. She assigned homework, as she often does, asking Colleen to read the Irish poets and writers. There are few countries more associated with the written word than Ireland. Even earlier history finds the oral story tellers, who kept Ireland's history alive through the ages. The podcast introduced a new word to me, and I went down the rabbit hole when I looked it up! Irish social history speaks of the seanchai .
These are the historic story tellers. In pre-literate Celtic culture, laws were not written but were sung by bards in long, lyric poems. The seanchai were well respected servants to the clan chiefs and kept track of all important information. They used all kinds of expression and speech conventions to tell their histories and their skills were passed down through the generations of their families.  Law and history existed because of them. And that defined their people and their place in this world. Their stories have been preserved in Ireland and are often performed at Gaelic celebrations. 



And so Liz convinced Colleen that the skills of story-telling are far from frivolous, are born of your heart and your history, and indeed, preserve your true identity. Story tellers are to be honored for giving us our past and our present.



Everything in these lessons related in my mind to my own pursuit of photography. We and our followers at FOL are all readers, and preservers. Whether we approach it by appreciating our pasts, or by preserving our family's future memories, our photography makes us part of the story telling tradition. Sometimes each individual image is a story in itself. Sometimes we create series or composites. Sometimes we are scrapbooking or thumb-nailing our immediate families lives.  But we are always preserving our history and defining our place. Tell us some stories in the gallery this week. Who are you and where do you come from? And remember not to belittle your contribution. Your love of  and place in the world show throughout your photography, whether or not your shots are technically perfect!




"People think that stories are shaped by people. In fact it's the other way around..."
                      Terry Pratchett









Monday, March 28, 2016

My Time(s)

by Carol


I love my Sunday New York Times. With the world the way it is these days, I cannot say that I comb through the daily papers, or even the Sunday papers for every news detail the way I used to, but I am still attached to my Sunday routine. As I have come into my own, I have become more aware of what is meaningful to me at my time of life - right now. What I have settled on, as those of you who read my posts probably know, is that I love people's stories. I love to see how an individual landed where he or she is at the present moment, and what lessons they have learned from their life experiences. And I love the more global picture - human nature and psychology - how do people react to certain situations; why does one person rise above while another capitulates? What makes one person face adversity with calm determination and creativity and another give up before they even begin?



Do you know where I find these wonderful personal stories? In the Sunday Times! Specifically in the "color sections." The Metropolitan section profiles day to day life in the city. Page two always has a feature called Sunday Routine which follows one person through their Sunday. This past weekend, Metro also contained an article about a little dog who gave a homeless man enough hope to get off the streets, a feature called "Neighborhood Joint" about a kosher bakery that is a cornerstone in a particular neighborhood and something called NYC Nature that reminds every week that nature can thrive in the midst of a great city.

My favorite weekly feature in the real estate section is called "Living In ...."  It picks a specific town every week and paints an intimate picture of what its like to live there from three or four examples of what you get for your money in housing, what the local restaurants and bars are, what the place is known for and personal comments by locals. Then there is "The Hunt." Like HG TV, it follows a couple looking for a home. It takes you through all the places they looked at, the thoughts they had about pros and cons as they make their decision, and their "happy ending" in the place they finally chose as a new home.

The travel section is, as in every newspaper, is full of buckets lists and dreams and empty corners where I have cut out articles for my bucket list folders. You will find the same holes in The Book Review, where I chop out reviews of books I want to read (although I am starting to transition that on-line through Goodreads.) Arts and Leisure inspires me to take more advantage of what Manhattan has to offer, and when I do find myself in the city, I am often gunning for one of their recommendations.



But by far, my favorite sections are the engagement/marriage announcements and the obituaries! While these may seem to be at opposing ends of the human spectrum, they are really quite similar. Each week the times features one wedding or engagement. It interviews the couple about how they met each other. They are often asked about the exact moment when they realized they were in love. We hear about "the chase." We speak with their good friends and parents about their observations, and often the article ends at their wedding where we see the whole show - from outfits to centerpieces to crazy uncles! Some are so bizarre that they validate the expression that real life is stranger than fiction - like the couple who wore space suits and entered the ceremony on a fabricated space ship, or those who choose to get married while surfing - minister trying to keep up. Others are huge society deals that make you feel as if Gatsby were still alive - and others no frills zen-like affairs full of personal meaning. I am telling you - its a Sunday morning novel in itself.

I hope I am not offending when I say I love to read the obituaries - but they are both public and personal history lessons. Talk about novels - just about every week I read a life story that I think might inspire me to write one! This past week gave me the story of Elliot Gant. He and his bother perfected the button-down shirt, making it a staple of  "the Ivy League and Madison Avenue men," through some amazingly creative innovations and marketing. It also featured Professor Hilary Putnam who taught  (and I love this) that "any philosophy that can be put in a nutshell belongs in one." In a field that loves to hear itself talk, he apparently believed in making the message understandable.  In the same section was the wife of Robert Altman, the film maker. She worked with her husband on all of his creative endeavors, and in later years became the keeper of his legacy and a font of knowledge for the film-making industry.



So there went my Sunday morning! But do you know what? I worked hard all week, I had a fun but very busy Saturday, I cleaned my house after work on Friday so that I could enjoy my weekend. And these Sunday morning hours with my Times, by the fire, with a bagel and a hot cup of coffee are a treasure I wouldn't trade. This may not be your cup of tea, but I recommend finding some time each week for you and  your cup of tea. Consider human nature and the world. Get out of your own head. Let your imagination run. And if your have time left over - do something creative with your newly inspired outlook. It will slow your speed. It will make your artwork better. It will make your life better.











 
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