This seems an appropriate thought in this day in time. Perhaps it could become the eleventh commandment, or better yet, the one and only.
Thought For the Day and the Rest of Your Life
At the Barrel House, Dayton, Ohio 2019
At the Barrel House, Dayton, Ohio 2019
This seems an appropriate thought in this day in time. Perhaps it could become the eleventh commandment, or better yet, the one and only.
In Janet’s Backyard, Dayton, Ohio 2019
Mona Lee Brock, Durant, OK 2015
Willie Nelson called Mona Lee Brock “the angel at the other end of the line.” She was one of the earliest farm advocates who worked with farmers across the country during and after the Farm Crisis of the 1980s. This true American Hero died last week at her home in Oklahoma. I had the distinct honor of photographing her during the making of the film, “Homeplace Under Fire,” with Charlie Thompson and Brooke Darrah, in 2015.
Please read her obituary in the Washington Post.
Mallory and Waylon, Marshall, Madison County, NC 2019
Kate, PawPaw, Madison County, NC, February, 2019. Darling Daughter. Child # 2. Girl of My Dreams.
Kris Moon, Before Baek, East Fork, 02-19
Kate and Kelsey, PawPaw, Madison County, NC, February 2019
Dee Dee Norton Buckner, Sodom, 1977.
I ran into my old friend Dee Dee at the Doctor’s office in Weaverville. We see each other pretty often, mostly at the grocery store so it was good visiting with her in an unexpected setting. But seeing her reminded me of a photograph I made of her when she was not yet a teenager and I was but a very young man. I had recently seen it on a contact sheet while looking through images for a next project.
As I age, as is the case with a lot of us seniors, my memory isn’t what it used to be. People’s names are especially difficult and I struggle to remember song and book titles, or when I did specific things.
My photographs have been my saving grace in that regard. I can go back through contact sheets and prints and remember where I was, what I was doing, who I was with, the time of year, the clothes people were wearing. Memory, of course, is one of photography’s great
gifts to us.
So, when I came across this photograph of Dee Dee, it took me right back to that summer of 1977 in Sodom when I moved in with Dellie Norton, Dee Dee’s great-grandmother. Dee Dee and I saw each other often then, most every day, and the portrait took me back to who we were 42 years ago, and who we’ve become since. Good memories, hard memories, memories that make us smile, others that
make us cry.