Weekly Photo Challenge: Perspective…and reality “Hic sunt dracones”

dragon

That’s Latin for “Here be dragons.”

In case you’re wondering, “Hic fugiens scutellas” means “here be flying saucers.” I’m just all full of useful Latin, aren’t I? Thanks, Google.

But let’s go back to the dragons, shall we? I first saw “here be dragons” in a history book. You’ve probably seen it, too, and didn’t know what it meant. I remember looking at old maps of the world — the cartography incomplete and a little off, and seeing sea monsters and serpents drawn along the edges. I didn’t know what it meant, so in my curious-little-kid-with-a-huge-imagination-self I conjured up my own meaning, that the map-makers didn’t know what dangers lay beyond the safe boundaries of their maps.

How about that? I was actually pretty close. The cartographers didn’t know what wonders lay beyond their horizons, and used the dragon (or winged serpent) as a metaphor for the pagan world that was beyond their reach.

Kind of like looking at space and seeing little green men. But I digress.

I took this picture outside the Lego store at Downtown Disney in Anaheim, CA while at a conference. I used my iPhone, and added one of the black and white filters. Did I say the dragon is made entirely of Lego blocks? It’s amazing.

I loved the perspective. The dragon was backlit, and for a moment, I was in my curious-little-kid-with-a-huge-imagination-self that loved reading sci-fi and fantasy.

The dragon looked real, and became real in the picture.  Perspective, as they say, is everything.

Weekly Photo Challenge: Abandoned

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This week’s photo challenge is abandoned.

That’s a powerful word, something that evokes a sense of despair for me, and so I am loathe to apply it to any persons. Yet here I am, posting this picture that I took on a whim while waiting for a friend to come out of a store.

I’ll never make it as a photo-journalist because I can’t bring myself to take this kind of picture. Yes, I know, I did in fact take this picture, and then post it, but I’m going to confess, it is not without a great deal of discomfort.

Let me explain. I’m not discomfited by the poor, nor the homeless. On the contrary, more and more I find myself drawn to them with more compassion than I’ve had in my whole life up to now. Is it Christ working in me? No doubt, although I do not know to what end.

To the person reading the title of this post and looking only at the photo, the message might be that the person captured in the photo is abandoned. I don’t know this. I do know that the photo is an intrusion…I’ve broken his peace for the sake of an internet game, and I almost didn’t use it after all. But then I got to thinking. This man, while seemingly abandoned by society … Has not been abandoned by God.

Perhaps that’s what my purpose is here, to draw attention to his humanity in spite of my preconceived notions. Because, in failing to see his human dignity, I would be the one abandoning my own humanity.

Weekly Photo Challenge: An Unusual Point of View

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Unusual. Challenge yourself to rethink your ideas about what subjects are appropriate, and then challenge yourself again to find an unusual perspective on your subject.

This picture is a selfie, a reflection of my front yard off the glass storm door. Every time I walk through this way, I adjust the American flag that we fly proudly on our front porch. The wind blows into the corner and tends to catch the flag and flip it once, sometimes twice, around the post before I notice it and straighten it up again.

I do this week after week until it’s time to retire the flag for the Boy Scout Troop at our church, and we put up a new flag.

I don’t think it’s a great picture from an aesthetic point of view. I’ve taken better. In fact, I was playing around with reflections all week trying to come up with today’s post, but I picked this one after I spontaneously posted this #gratefultweet on Twitter:

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I woke up in a reflective mood. It’s been a crazy week with news of war, and in spite of rhetoric, sometimes artfully deceptive, but mostly absurd, I feel no more hopeful than when all of this started. It stings to be talking of war on yet another 9/11 anniversary, one that is now doubled as a reminder of unresolved Benghazi questions.

I was going to let today pass with just some private reflection. Prayer. A visit to the Adoration chapel at the church down the street from where I work.

But then I thought, no. I like this picture; I’ll post it today. I like that the flag, though caught in dim light, it’s color starting to fade, is the focal point. Though everything behind it may seem colorless, you can see I’ve played up the colors in the flag.

I searched for the meaning of those colors and found this explanation:

“The colors of the pales (the vertical stripes) are those used in the flag of the United States of America; White signifies purity and innocence, Red, hardiness & valour, and Blue, the color of the Chief (the broad band above the stripes) signifies vigilance, perseverance & justice.” from usflag.org

I like that, and my prayer is that we always exhibit those qualities as a nation.

 

 

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