Creativity

underside of a red hibiscus against a privacy fence

delicate front of a red hibisucus flower

Today’s Picture to Ponder Photos

Red Hibiscus flowers on bush in my back yard. The upper photo is of the underside of the flower, backed by my privacy fence.

Today’s Self-Reflecting Queries
Today I invite you to look into your life:

1. Are there people or situations in your life looming large, right in front of you, whom you are walking around or ignoring? These might not even be intentional actions.

If so, I invite you to stop, look at and spend some time with what you are now seeing. Is any thing new opening up for you?

2. Are there beautiful objects, people and/or situations in your life that you look at all the time from only one perspective? If so, I invite you to take some time and examine it/them from several directions and then to, again, pay attention to what might be opening up for you.

My “story” of the day, leading to these questions -The red hibiscus bush, the source of these flowers, is quite large, almost five feet in height and probably, at least, four feet across. Right now a couple of the branches are crawling across the ground. The bush sits outside my patio window and, when I open my eyes to it, it is the first thing I see every morning as I walk out onto my patio to sit and write my “morning pages.”

The point to today’s story is that the hibiscus bush is also right in front of the maranta – prayer plant – I’ve been photographing daily. See Unconditional Love – The Maranta Story on my blog. At times, I’ve even stepped over the branches to get closer to the prayer plant. And the hibiscus is only a foot or two away from the passionflower vine that I’ve also been photographing daily.

In the case of both the maranta and passionflower, I have taken on the theme of observing daily the opening up, growth and expansion of these two plants. I’ve moved from “peeling away the layers of an onion, analogous to peeling away the layers of ourselves” (note the several blog posts) to observing “adding on,” so-to-speak.

In my mind, the hibiscus bush had no relevance to what I had honed in on for daily picture-taking focus, so I simply ignored it. Then one recent day, the camera and I did stop and pay attention to the delicacy of the front view of one of the flowers in the late afternoon light and to the beauty, grace and stateliness of the underside of another.

We, thus come back to today’s queries. Where in your life may you be ignoring beauty that is right in front of you? And, where are you only paying attention to one view or perspective?

As always, have fun and play with these questions.

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Yellow Hibiscus Invites Play

by Sheila Finkelstein on August 24, 2008

yellow hibiscus firts with us
Yellow Hibiscus flirting, inviting us to stay out and play on a beautiful, sunshiney day in Florida.
close up of inside of yellow hibiscus
Or is she saying, “Come in and play, with lights and shadows, textures”?

I responded by taking my camera, photographing the hibiscus, and then going inside to work on my book. During breaktime, looking for a photo, this one winked at me again and asked to cheer you on the web.

Happy SUNday.

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Photography and Sound – Examples from the Morikami

by Sheila Finkelstein on August 22, 2008

Close up photograph of a bamboo deer chaser at the Morikami Museum
a Deer Chaser (Shishi Odoshi) in the Morikami Gardens in Delray Beach, FL

This deer chaser is one of my all-time favorite photographs. I find it very peaceful and healing when I want to center myself. In Issue 94 of PICTURE TO PONDER in May 2005, I wrote, “I love, love, love this photo. It lights me up with a smile and totally energizes me. Part of it I think are the contrasts and the shadows on the bamboo and, of course, the water is healing.” Issue 94 gives more information and other photographs

Whenever I am in the Gardens and someone is stopped by the deer chaser, I love explaining it’s function while waiting for the “noise” that would chase a deer away from the garden in which it’s placed.

Yesterday when I stopped in for a quick visit to the Gardens at the Morikami Museum, I experienced an “aha” moment. As I walked through the Bamboo Garden I was stopped by unusual sounds and suddenly realized that it was the clacking of the hard wood as the trees hit each other in the somewhat high wind. I realized that I could capture this with the recording feature on my digital camera.

When I moved onto the Deer Chaser spot, it occurred to me that I could finally capture this sound also, to share with you, my visitors. It has taken me this long (a couple of years) to connect the technology of my camera and that of Video after a training session with Audio Acrobat. I did capture the bamboo sounds and those of the waterfalls there and will post those at a future time. In the meantime, in 8 seconds, you too can experience the deer chaser.

Note – Today’s post is inspired by my friend, pet portrait artist, Rececca Collins who has very much gotten into using video on as one of the tools she using on her blog for educating viewers on some of the ways she uses here creative genius, predominately now with her pet portraits.

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close-up of a sunflower with alstromeria - watercolor effect

Full moon in clouds with insert

IMPORTANT: If these photos inspire writing or anything else that has you share it and the photo, please be certain to credit the source, including the URL of this issue, http://www.eteletours.com/v4-issue30.html

Today’s Picture to Ponder Photos
Two very different photos, as explained in the Queries section.

The upper photo is a view focusing in on Sunflowers surrounded by Alstromeria in a floral arrangement in a ceramic vase.

sunflowers and alstromeria in a vase in the home of artist Sally Cooper

(Note the painting in the background is one of the many wonderful paintings of artist, Sally Cooper, who very graciously hosted a gathering of member artists from WITVA (Women In The Visual Arts).

When I came across the featured photo the other day in one of my folders, I felt uplifted, having the momentary feeling that I was looking at a water color rather than a photograph. It seemed to be a perfect one to feature today, as so many people throughout the United States, at least, are experiencing wet, dreary and threatening weather.

The lower photo is a photograph of a Full Moon Amidst Clouds on a recent clear night. The completed image is a result of using several processes in the Photoshop Elements Course I just completed. Click on Lesson 5-6 and scroll the bottom of the page to see the unaltered photos and other exercises in that class.

I include it here because I get the feeling of celebration from the photo, with the lilt of the center image.

Intro to Today’s Self-Reflecting Queries
As I wind down from all the work that has been involved in preparing for the changeover, moving Picture to Ponder from one publisher to another, there have been several layers of sadness for me. The first is that I’ve really appreciated the service I’ve had from EZezine for the almost four years that I have been working with them, so there is that feeling of loss.

Then there has been my concern for making certain that everyone who cares about Picture to Ponder is ensured of having the opportunity to continue. Once doing that, I’m left with the sadness of the loss of those subscribers who have not responded and will no longer be on the list. Of course, they may not have been opening the issues in the first place.

I shared my feelings with two masterminding buddies and close friends and asked what they thought of my featuring the moody moon/cloud photos for this “last” issue. They did not see the one I ultimately used here since it hadn’t yet been done. I wrote that I had a lively one (the flowers) which had been my original choice.

I was reminded that this is the “first” issue for many of you AND I could be viewing
the whole thing as a celebration of new beginnings. Thank you, Morgine and Marifran!

The Queries
Coming from what I experienced, I invite you to look at:

1. Are there places in your life, where you are focussing on what’s missing rather than on what’s available?

2. When you do see, acknowledge and honor what’s there, do you allow yourself to celebrate it? If so, how?

3. When you are in a quandry, or are feeling sad, do you simply shut down, withdraw, or are you able to seek out and ask for support?

4. Do you remain aware of what methods you can use to create shifts for yourself?

For me in addition to communicating with my friends and support team, I was able to turn my energy into a creative venture. While playing with the photos in Photoshop, fulfilling on other coursework, I wound up with a totally unexpected result, a way to use both images, celebrating an “aliveness” theme.

While working with the photos I had no hidden agenda or attachment to results and that, I say, is what made it work.

Where, if at all, can you find yourself in the latter example?

As always, have fun with these questions as you explore and play.

I’d love to hear from you. Remember this issue is also posted on our new PHOTOGRAPHY AND TRANSFORMATION BLOG. Simply fill in the box under REPLY to place your comments.

And, while you’re there be sure to check out the final photos of the Onion Layers through to Layer 13.

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red onion before starting to peel layers on the 13th level
How the onion appeared before I started the last stages of discovering the core.

red onion core with several more segments
Several more sections of the inner core unfold

onion layer peels from last layers

 

peels of all the inner sections of this round
The shavings/skins of what unpeeled from layers 12 and 13 – Do we focus on what we took away or all the parts that remain?

 

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Red Onion Layer 8 – Peeling Away the Layers

by Sheila Finkelstein on August 14, 2008

In the issue of Picture to Ponder this week, the previous post on this blog, or accessible by clicking on PTP – Vol 4 – Issue 29 I wrote about racing through the layers of the rest of the onion in one sitting to “get to the end” of the project. In the meantime, I’ve left you wondering, perhaps, about what was in between. Thus, I’m backing up for you.

Red onion peeling away layers 2 and layer 8

I started this time peeling away the outer layer of the smaller section which had emerged in layer 5. Because this section seemed so small and delicate, rather than plunging in with my fingers and ripping away the layer, I took a knife and slowly and gently started peeling. I was surprised to notice how thick the layer was, compared to what had been peeling away from the larger section, as can be seen in the next photo.

Another view of Red onion peeling away layers 2 and layer 8

Once again I got rough on the dominant section. The smaller one looks so delicate and vulnerable. I could create a lot more observations and queries here and I’ll leave that to you for today.

both onion segments completely exposed at the end of peeling layer 8

Nice and smooth, the sections, feeling quite exposed. The bottoms of the layers, jagged in between. Can’t reach them with my knife or small scissors. They remain as memories of what was.

a humorous view of red onion querying our seriousness

A different view of the second photo here today. I laughed when I saw it. Perhaps it’s a reminder to stop taking ourselves so seriously.

red onion - two sections look like a ballon character

This one, too, brought a laugh. Is he/she flaunting, with nose up in the air, looking at us out of the corner of his/her eye? It also gives off the feeling of one of those balloons that clowns make at parties, again, reminding us to REMEMBER to PLAY.

 

 

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red onion peeled layer 10

red onion layer 10 on black background

red onion layer10 colorized and desaturated

IMPORTANT: If these photos inspire writing or anything else that has you share it and the photo, please be certain to credit the source, including the URL of this issue, http://www.eteletours.com/v4-issue29.html

Today’s Picture to Ponder Photos
Peeling layer 10 of the red onion I introduced in the last issue of Picture to Ponder

As I stated in that issue, I have been featuring one or more photos a day, on my Photography and Transformation blog of the peeling away process of the layers of this one red onion. The onion has been featured on mixed backgrounds, sometimes the wood snack tabletop and other times on a black cloth.

The photographs I’m sharing in Picture to Ponder today are more about the beauty of the imagery than about the peeling process. I so love the elegance, smoothness, shape and colors in the onion, as seen in the top photo, that I feel drawn to share it with you.

As I photographed, I felt the remaining onion definitely needed the richness of the black background to “show it off” in all its glory. I then went further and experimented with the photograph using a Photoshop Elements 6.0 technique I just learned in the online class in which I am currently enrolled. For more photos from that lesson see PSE6 – Lesson 3 and 4.

As I write, I keep scrolling back up to view the photos. I hope that they bring you some of the same pleasure.

Self-Reflecting Queries
When I first started with this self-initiated project on observing the onion, analogous to stripping away layers of ourselves, I was intrigued with the parallels that kept coming up for me in terms of reaching inside myself. I also thought that many of you might find this an interesting tool for reflecting upon your own multi-layers and dimensions.

I initially committed to myself, and I think on the blog, that I would post each day the revealing of a new layer.I had intended, I thought, to photograph a new layer each day. After the seventh day, it occurred to me that it wasn’t about photographing a new layer each day. Rather it was simply about recording the process and what was left each time a new layer was peeled away.

Actually, as I’m writing, I’m thinking that the latter statement may well be “justification,” a process I have mastered well.

Although I was still finding what was happening interesting and sometimes exciting, overall I was getting bored and impatient, wanting to hurry to the end. I wished to see everything that was there and be finished.

So, thinking it didn’t really matter if I did the rest of the layers at once, I spent just under an hour and took 150 or more photographs and went from layer 8 through layers 12 or 13. The reason the numbers are not definite is that, in the process of getting finished, I neglected to put systems in place for accurate recording.

The photographs at the end were not as high in quality. Perhaps I simply took fewer, so had less from which to choose.And, the photographs became almost a blur of noise, not knowing which was what, having relied on my brain to retain it all.

The saddest part is that I “ripped” myself off, depriving myself of the full pleasure of each new discovery, of which there still were many. And, I can forgive me. In addition to what I learned about myself, analogous to the onion, I discovered procedures I can use the next time I undertake such a project.

For more about the onion and my discoveries, I invite you to follow along on the blog, starting at the most current, and scrolling down, or start in the July 2008 archives and work your way up.The message here today is not about the onion layers. Rather it’s about how we approach our activities and passions –

Thus, Queries for the Day – I invite you to look at your own life and consider:

1 – When you take on a project, do you have systems in place for sticking with it and, also, for being flexible, adjusting, if called for, as you move along?

 

2 – Are there places in your life now where you are currently justifying shortcuts that, in fact, may not be the best solution? Are there similar situations in the past from which you can learn, or already have done so?and, as I review them before deleting, I think several of the queries from our last issue are worth repeating:

3 – Do you jump right in, or do you slowly peel away the levels of a project, to get at the heart of it? As you look at, and think about the onion analogy, are there any shifts, you might want to consider making?

4 – Do you usually have an intention when you start an activity? Do you have a method for keeping that present, a reminder system? If not, is there something you would like to set up? (Pretty much the same as number 1, today, adding “intention.”)

5 -And, on a slightly different track, is there a playful practice that you’ve been meaning to do, something simple to which you might like to commit to doing on a daily basis for a week?

I committed to photographing fruits daily this week. Right now it feels like a burden AND I know once into it, because I said so, the play will come. Sometimes the “burden” is simply in thinking about it, dwelling on it.

6 – Is there a place in your life right now where you are feeling burdened, where getting in action might bring in the missing playful element(s)?

I’d love to hear from you. Simply fill in the box under REPLY to place your comments.

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Red Onion – Peeling Layer 7

by Sheila Finkelstein on August 11, 2008

red onion day- peeling layer 7

Most of Layer 7 Peeled from the Larger Bulb

  red onion - peeling lay 7 from small bulb part

Surprisingly the Layer surrounding the smaller section is thicker than that around the larger. Do we more tightly protect the smaller, perhaps the more sensitive, components of ourselves?

  red onion layter 7 peeled from both segments of the onion

Both parts are still together. Per my fears expressed here yesterday, I find it interesting that it never occurred to me to trust that the basal structure (in onion language) would, in fact, keep the parts intact.  It was difficult to peel off the layers between the structures. Note the resulting bruising.

  red onion in dish with all the pieces peeled from layers 7

 The onion with all the pieces peeled away this seventh day. I love the way the smaller section, though apart, curves over and looks down on the larger part of itself.

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New Layer of Self Revealed – Onion Day 5

by Sheila Finkelstein on August 9, 2008

peeling away onion layer - day 5

To start peeling the layer on Day 5, the section I had started separating on Day 1 now opened up. The remaining piece that had held it to the onion was layer 5 and now it had to go. Reminds me of the rare times I allowed myself to feel that I was hanging on by a thin thread.

Top of onion separates from the rest

The separated inside of the top of the fifth layer also has layers within. I love the beauty of the inside of that start of the layer I will be peeling off. How complex and beautiful are the many parts of ourselves!

two sections of red onion now revealed

As I finished peeling layer 5 a whole new section of the onion was revealed!! – the two parts of it – the Ying? and Yang? – the Masculine and Feminine parts of ourselves? One larger than the other!  – Ponderings for the day.

On a final note – I do not like the background of the cloth here, especially in the night light. This week’s lesson in the Photoshop Elements 6 course I’m taking is “Isolating Parts of an Image.” What synchronicity! I’m thinking I’ll use one of these photos to put the onion in a more natural background.

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Peeling Away the Next Layer – Veggies Day 4

by Sheila Finkelstein on August 7, 2008

Peeling away at the onion - Day 3

Once again, I started in immediately with my knife to peel the next layer. When I saw how I was scraping the inner surface, I immediately switched to gently peeling away with my fingers.

I wonder, “Is this how I treat myself (and others), immediately cutting in? What will be available as I become more gentle with myself? ” How about if it’s simply – not always so simple – appreciating the unaltered beauty of what’s underneath?

How about you? How do you treat yourself? With a knife or with loving tenderness?

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