27 November 2011

Do not speak, unless it improves on silence. . .


For most of us the inundation of information upon us at any one time is staggering if not overly abundant and at times even deafening. We end up spending so much time attempting to decipher what we are to make of the multitude of messages coming at us that it seems more energy and conscious thought is spent weeding out than welcoming in.

To this I strongly suggest you allow yourself time every day to enjoy silence. Find a simple moment to commit to doing nothing, absolutely nothing for some set period of time. Be it a minute or an hour, enjoy the silence of mind, body and soul. Speak not nor be spoken to, and for once every day allow silence to be the loudest part of your day. . .

09 November 2011

Is photography an exercise in Buddhist thinking?

Roughly ten years ago in the old days (I know, since when is a mere ten years ago the "old days"?) when film was the standard in photography, the notion of presenting your final image as envisioned when you shot it was a matter of developing the negative through skill, trial and error, and often a bit of luck. Literally and figuratively this meant taking the negative and turning it into a positive, turning it into an image that was as you imagined it when you shot it and thus give it the look you want all who see it to remember and associate with you.

Much like Buddhist philosophy which believes that we are not to change the world but the way we experience it, all of us who use digital capture devices, be it a camera or camera phone to capture the world around us have what I would say is the same responsibility. As photographers at any level we have the opportunity now more than ever to creatively turn the digital negative into a positive, much like life. After all, when you think about it life is one unprocessed negative as we take in the information before us with our senses unconsciously aware in that very moment of "capture". And then, like processing the digital negative from our camera, we wisely decide what to do with the information our senses have introduced into our consciousness so as to produce the desired effect.

So I challenge you to now think of the negative in any situation, photographic as in life, as an opportunity to turn it into something positive. Whatever you do it's your life to live as it is your photo to make. Just enjoy the process. . .