Love & magnifying glass 2    The most magic word we know is magnified on page 1139  of the Random House Dictionary. "Love" sleeps there with other "L" words like "louse" & "lousy" & "lovage" (a European plant of the parsley family) waiting to be awakened by our attention.

   "A profoundly passionate affection for another person," the first definition reads. Yet, we know that no combination of words can capture what Ty dad horse 2love means to us.

   A photograph is a helpful gift. There are my son & me astride a horse in 1977. The moment he sent this rich memories returned of a day I would have forgotten without the the picture's prompting 

  Below is my son with his son off the Nantucket coast a few years back. For reasons only father's can know, both images break my heart. In each a man protects his offspring.

   Fathers are caregivers too.

   Any of us can magnify a memory from childhood. Most of us forget most moments.

   Pictures can vivify feelings in countless ways.

  Tyler miles (2)  

   The more you are present to old images of family & friends the better your chance to deepen your passion.

   Every photograph captures someone no longer that person. Who you & they were in that time is reborn when you see rather than glance. 

   Memories of love need tending lest they be lost. Sometimes only a photograph can retrieve them &, in so doing, make more sacred the fabric from which our lives are woven. 

   Snapshots should never be snap-seen. That is the risk of cell phone shots that, in their profundity, can drown the holiness of any specific image. 

   Those we love have sewn themselves into our hearts. Embroider your life with the golden thread their portraits toss into your hands. 

   Look back. See if you feel in new ways the "profound affection" of love redefined.

-Erie Chapman   

4 responses to “Days 319 – 323 – Magnifying Love Through Photographs”

  1. Terry Avatar
    Terry

    My son Jon is currently gathering all of our family photos to scan them into a mega database that all of our family can look at to relive and re-define love and happiness and momentous events in our shared lives. And as a fisherman at heart, I certainly know that a good photo of a trout briefly captured is worth 10,000 words! Amen

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  2. teresa reynolds Avatar
    teresa reynolds

    There are those among us who have their ear to the ground of being such that I don’t miss my life. The way that love can be rediscovered in older photographs is a practice that inspires me. I’m spending this evening watching old videos and thumbing through photo albums growing love. Thank you so much.

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  3. ~liz Wessel Avatar

    This is such a rich and extraordinary meditation that reflects the radiance of your being. I find that the written word can lend itself to treasured memories as well. Just as all the hope, wisdom, love and affirmations that have been shared in and among those who visit these pages. Thank you.

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  4. Jolyon Avatar
    Jolyon

    A photograph. A time machine.
    Sometimes a photograph is like a song. It takes you there. The past is present. The smells, the laughter, the tastes, the colors and especially the love. What was, is now again, for the moment. My mother-in-law during her last years treasured the stories photographs would tell her. She was losing her short-term memory and the pictures we shared together brought her family alive again in the present. The fact that some of the people she was talking about where no longer alive was lost to her. Her memories were vivid and rushed to be told when an old photo crossed her hands. The joy of being present with her family again one more time was/is precious.
    The stories old photos can tell! (Hopefully your family wrote on the back of the pictures like mine did.)
    Two hundred years ago it was paintings by the likes of Francisco Goya that told our story. 42 years ago it was a Paul Simon Kodachrome that told the stories of our lives. What does your photograph sound like?
    an aside…
    (God please help this generation of selfie Kardash-neons)

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