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Tuesday, November 22, 2022

Holiday Week

I woke up feeling like it's The Holidays, in a nice way.
Sitting at my desk at 6:30 this morning, looking out my bedroom window, I see a pink dawn sky. There's snow on the ground, just enough to brighten the dark days.
I'll be going to the grocery store later, for sweet potatoes, dried apricots, pecans, lemons, and brown sugar, for the dish I'm making for Thanksgiving, in two days.

But first, the dentist, to replace a filling that fell out. I've neglected that side of life (dental & medical check ups, etc.) since Covid. Also, banking...

I. Slightly Boring, Slightly Scary Things to Attend To

The other day, my sister asked me if I get lonely.

Not emotionally lonely, so much, I said, as sometimes weary of having to make Every Single Decision alone.
(Which, I always say, is also the NICE thing about being alone:
you get to make every single decision.
It's not like everyone who has a partner has a partner who is helpful in the ways they need, either, I've noticed.  )

(I'm existentially lonely sometimes, but that comes with being human.)

The decisions I'd most like help with are the slightly boring, slightly scary ones––mostly financial and medical.
(I am lucky they've been only "slightly" troublesome, so far in my life. But when things are BIGly troublesome--"my laptop has died!"––I do kick into gear and take care of them. Usually. Eventually.)

I saw (on Instagram) a graphic showing signs of ADHD.
It included something like, "You ignore tasks to do creative work instead".
What?
Is that a symptom of a disorder? I thought it was a good thing!
I am disordered, for sure:
I was going to take care of financial things on my day off yesterday, and instead spent all afternoon photographing a toy inside a persimmon...

Of course there are serious mental disorders out there, and of course it's good we should have information about them, and help for them.
I remember when it was otherwise, and I would not return!
But personally,
I've gotten into this habit of diagnosing everyone I know--and myself. It's the mood of the age.
I'm trying to STOP doing that.

I think of my Auntie Vi, who was never up on psychological terms.
She'd just describe her friends as individuals with unique qualities--sometimes annoying.
Of one friend, she'd say, "So-and-so never listens, so when we go out to lunch, I just listen to her."

What that friend did for Vi, in the end, was stay with Vi for her last few days on Earth, tending to all sorts of physical needs. At this point, conversation didn't matter.

Anyway, I have a backlog of relatively minor boring/frightening (to me) things to attend to. You know? Like, looking into paying my electric and gas bills online. Or, do I want to keep paying them on paper? I kind of like that--it makes me aware of what I'm spending. But, does that matter?
I don't know.
What do you think?

I'm taking a couple days off over Thanksgiving--the store is only closed Thursday. If I don't spend the days all PLAYING WITH TOYS, I may get to some of these things.

I was going to get a big Xmas tree this weekend, but now the time has arrived, I don't think I will. They're too expensive, and too big for my space, really, now I've got bookshelves and chairs... I think I'd find a tree more of an annoyance, and not worth the money.

I'm failing to live on $50/week. The dentist today will use up my entire monthly allowance.
Also, when the temps dropped below freezing last week, I gave in and bought a down coat that comes to my knees.
New! Wonderful! But at $140 (on sale, at REI), there's three week's allowance.
My bike has a flat, so there's that to pay for. (If I learn how to change it myself, it'll be cheaper.)
Etc., etc.

Life on the Cheap is on my list of Things to Make Decisions About.

Blah, blah, blah.

II. Life in Motion


I'd rather think more about the whats and hows of toy representation.
For Manet Week last week, an Instagrammer DM'd me that she was thinking to recreate Manet's Olympia (Wikipedia article)--his famous painting of a naked white woman being served by a Black woman.

My, oh my.
I DM'd her back, suggesting that painting is "racially problematic", did she really want to get into that? (There's more about that in the Wikipedia link above.)

She wrote back an art historical perspective, justifying Manet,
and I wrote back saying, "But the viewer won't know that. (
Of course, do what you want, I'm not policing you, just bringing it up.)"

She did picnic on the grass instead, and wrote an explanation about how Manet presented women as real people...

Okay, but who reads the text on Instagram?
And should they have to, to understand your picture?

I wrote a little text to go with the Persimmon pictures, but they should stand alone. I hope. Does the written explanation really explain them, anyway: "A toy inspired by Bosch hides inside a persimmon"?

My philosophy of toy photography was shaped by the couple seconds that conclude the movie Serenity  (2005, following up Joss Whedon's sci-fi series Firefly):
The spaceship, Serenity, has come through a storm, but as it sails safely away, a metal plate tears off and comes flying at us. The show is about navigating the chaos of life and politics, so that's a great way to show There Is No Safe Haven.


What influenced me, however, is that the plate is a tiny bit out of focus as it moves. It feels real, but of course it's not. It's computer generated: they had to CHOOSE to make it out of focus.

It's hard to get a sense of live action with toys, because they aren't moving on their own (not when we're looking!).
I've mentioned how kids playing in the Toy Section like to line toys up. I like to, too. When toys are lined up in photos, however, they look frozen, like family portraits taken in a studio.

I tried to make the persimmon photos look as if they were taken as the dolls moved, not as if they were posing for an instructional manual: a little bit off-center, a little bit out of focus in spots. Not so you'd notice, but enough, hopefully, so they feel less stiff.

I don't know if I succeeded, but that's what I'm going for in the future.
The other extreme in toy photography is professional photographers who make their action shots look as slick as movie CGI. Too slick, for my taste.

I like to sense the human hand behind it all.


OK, off to the dentist now...
Happy week, everybody!

8 comments:

  1. What a lot to ponder here!
    I am grateful to have my person to help make the big decisions. Or to make them if I am honest. I don't like to do that. But it's the little ones that kill me. What to make for supper? I ask him. He always says, "I can't think of supper now. I'm still too full from breakfast."
    Or else "chili" or "clam spaghetti."
    Why do I ask him?
    You are right about focus- sometimes if it is blurred, we receive far more information than if it's not.
    I diagnose everyone I meet, I think. But I try not to perceive those diagnoses as being negative. I probably fail.

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  2. making your own decisions , being the Lone Ranger in life is preferable for sure. Eat what you want for dinner without having to prepare for everyone else's fancy, is such a freedom!
    As for photographing toys in action- Erik is an animator, stop -go, and has done some amazing things with toys "moving". I have learned nothing from his skills obviously- I do not think I am a patient enough person.
    Analyze that! I could label myself all sorts of disorders I suppose but in the end I am just riding around as a human- too spontaneous, too whimsical, too helium ,too silly- Dennis is opposite - we meet in the middle and as far as living with another flawed human we balance it all out, it would seem. (though I feel , at times, tethered - PLEASE STOPP!!! too much gravity!!!)
    Good luck at the dentist's , not my favorite way to spend time but whatchgonnado- we do need our teeth!

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  3. Also, glad you got a decent , warm coat! You will be so glad when winter truly kicks in!!

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  4. When I was a freshman in college, my poetry prof told us about a student who had gone down to the Village to interview Gregory Corso, who couldn’t decide whether to have coffee or tea. He really couldn’t decide.

    I would decide to pay bills by mail. You have the satisfaction of writing a check and using a stamp, and you avoid the dollar fee that at least some utilities add on if you pay automatically.

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  5. Hope the dentist appointment went ok..pirate had a large filling and it hasn't settled..so another appointment tomorrow...and we leave here first thing Friday......
    From next year he will be treated on the NHS..but will still have to pay, but not as much.
    This one has cost £140 so far 😕

    Yes, ADHD....join the club!!

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  6. yes, do those of us ever feel lonely or get lonely. but one can be lonely even in a marriage or relationship.

    at times it would be nice to have someone else around to do things together or bounce ideas off of but most times i like being on my own. dinner can just be cereal!! woo hoo!!!

    and yes, stamps and a check are the way to go. i still do most of my bills that way. and drop off at the po.

    kirsten

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  7. MS MOON: It sounds wonderful to have a compatible partner like yours. Except for how he's no help with choosing dinner. :)
    Answer: Shrimp po'boy!
    Diagnosing can be a super useful handle--it definitely has helped me figure out how to deal with certain coworkers.

    LINDA SUE: You helium, you! Gotta love that lighter than air element! Does Eric share his animation online somewhere? I'd love to see it.
    I do not have the patience for that kind of work, at all.

    Winter has kicked in --it was 18ºF last weekend--and I was glad of the coat, yes!

    MICHAEL: Gregory Corso unable to choose between tea and coffee! Ha, wow... Seems fitting, somehow, for a creator:
    Can choose words but not beverages.

    Thanks for the vote for pen and stamp--that's what I've been doing, and I like it, and you (and Kirsten below, too), helped seal the deal.

    GZ: Poor Pirate, and poor me. Dentistry is no fun, and I had to pay $300!!! I was in shock. BUt it seems it's all done--I hope his is too, in time for your flight!
    How do you manage ADHD--do you take meds? Lots of people I know do...

    KIRSTEN: I would rather be lonely alone than live with HouseMate--though I wasn't lonely during Covid isolation, I never got to sink down into that fertile place underneath loneliness because there was always someone to distract me.

    Cheerios for dinner! Yay!

    THanks for the input about bills--you and Michael helped me confirm that I'm going to keep doing what I'm doing--mailing them. I like it!


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  8. (Frex = Fresca... signed in on wrong account)

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