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Posts Tagged ‘landscape’

I just enhanced the brightness and contrast of a recent picture of Japanese maple branches in foreground and oak tree branches in the background.  The original picture was badly out of focus and I almost hit delete but I decided to pause and just play with the pixels a bit.

 

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… inspired in part by reading Tattoos on the Heart The Power of Boundless Compassion by Gregory Boyle.  An excellent read that highlights the power of compassion, the strength found in families (however family is defined) and the impact of telling someone “you matter in this world.”  The book is composed of nonfiction stories.  I suppose that’s why stories keep bubbling up in my mind.

My brother remembers it as the “rumble in the jungle.” I remember it as the school bus ride from Hades.  The short of it is that I was in the 8th grade and he was in the 6th grade.  I don’t remember how the message was communicated but somehow during the school day I was told that he was going to get jumped on the bus ride home that afternoon.  And he was.  And then he remembers me saying, “Get your hands off my brother.” Luckily our older brother had taught us how to make fists ’cause there were plenty of them flying.  Eventually the school bus made it back to school, the older boys were suspended, and my brother remembers that no one ever tried touching him again.  I remember the principal saying to me, “Cynthia, what were you thinking? How could you get yourself into a fight?”  I didn’t reply but the answer was easy.  I wasn’t thinking.  There was no thought at all involved.  No one was messing with my brother but me.  Family ties, right?

But what tied my aunt to the girls who wanted to mess with her granddaughter?  There was an incident where my aunt had to sit on her brownstone stoop to bar entry to this  gang of girls.  As I wrote in an earlier post, she said to them,  “I do not know why you did what you did to my grandchild.  I do not care what you say now, that you want to play and not fight.  You shall not enter this house without removing me first.”  The girls looked at her, how frail she was.  My aunt returned the look and shook her head. “I love my grandchild, do you hear?  I love that child and,” she added without hesitation and with great sincerity,  “I love you too.”  The girls, all of them, walked away without further word.  My aunt did not know those girls and yet she did and does still love them.  Why?

Other random thoughts flutter through my head like butterflies (in shades of gold and gray and a bit of blue).  But I must stop and get up from this computer and head out into a sunny day.  Where ever you are in the world, I hope you are having a good Monday.

 

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Salt Marsh Grasses

Salt Marsh Grasses

I am having a rather abstract, curmudgeonly morning.  I decided to share the abstraction via these images taken over the past few days.  I’m hoping the curmudgeon part will fade away.  We’ll see … 😉

A Distant Field of Gold and Purple

A Distant Field of Gold and Purple

Beauty Growing by the Muffler Shop

Beauty Growing by the Muffler Shop Next Door

Muffler Shop Parking Lot ... Enhanced

Muffler Shop Parking Lot Enhanced

The Oak Tree That Towers Over the House

The Oak Tree That Towers Over the House

 

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Branches viewed while on a short walk this afternoon.  Yes, I played around with the color and such a bit.  I think the green of spring is finally calling to me. 😉

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A few folks have asked about the “donate to charities” section on this blog.  I’ll start with WalkBoston.  As a card carrying pedestrian living in a part of the U.S. that is fairly well networked with buses, trains, etc, I thought I knew all I needed to know about transportation.  But after becoming involved with this Massachusetts nonprofit I have come to learn a great deal more about the benefits of pedestrian access for individuals of all physical abilities,  and of the necessity to understand and advocate for certain transportation infrastructures.

As someone with no sense of direction (my mother used to say I could get lost in a paper bag), I have also come to rely upon the organization’s lovely timed walking maps that are freely accessible online:   timed walking maps.  With map in hand, I’ve gotten into conversations with strangers on the streets of Boston, and its helped me (a shy person, honest) say to someone, let’s go for a walk and investigate these sights.  These images are the sights I “investigated” in Boston’s Back Bay this past Friday.

The older I get, for reasons as varied as terrorism to back pain, I recognize that walking beneath the quiet of  tree branches in a city or on a mountain top is a gift.  I hope I never take walking in Boston, or in any other area, for granted again.

If you’re in the Massachusetts area and you’d like to learn more about WalkBoston, you can visit the website here.  Meanwhile, enjoy the day. 😉

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… a beautiful light falls upon the landlord’s trees and shrubs.  I have said it once and I’ll say it again, one day I will have to make him a book of all the beauty I’ve seen out of his windows over the years. 😉 And now I am off into the day for a walk.  Have a good day, folks.

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… wrapped around trees and trailing over broken stone walls, I’m sure there must be rabbits and mice and maybe a bird or two, but all I can see are the blossoms.

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black bird in rose branches

black bird in rose branches

When I originally took this photo, I did not even see the blackbird.  I was solely focused on the leaves.  Only later did I notice the lovely silhouette with its little luminous eye.  I suppose that he saw me.  Poet Wallace Stevens thought there were Thirteen Ways of Looking at a Blackbird.  Just click on the link to read his words. And I hope you’re enjoying National Poetry Month. 😉

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