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The Anomaly (For Helle)

Photography Flowers/Plants posted on Jan 13, 2011
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Description


History, among the people of Agara, is not a reliable source for the truth. On the other hand fiction, poetry, and the sonorous recitations of local (mostly village) myth-singers offer profound and indisputable insights into the existential nature of Everything. (If you understand Agaran.) I’ve been to Agara. Many times. I will go again. Many more times. On an early trip to that small, mechanical country, I met a guy who called himself an insect. He is one of my closest friends, though I don’t see him as often as I like. His name is Tērō. When I first met him, he delivered chickens to local markets. He smoked like a champion. I met him on my first trip to Agara, to the city of Pekkur. I was young. He was younger. I am older now. Tērō is still younger than I am: a distortion of my own youth. He knows things I do not. He has probably forgotten more than I will ever learn. He still calls himself an insect, and I believe his conviction. I can look at him and see only my friend, however. Not an insect. He looks and acts like the secret love-child of a Viking, fondled and seduced by some supernatural Hun; when he speaks, I can hear Icelandic volcanoes in his consonants and the Russian taiga in his vowels. In short, Tērō, who calls himself an insect, is the child of a culture scarcely understood. He doesn’t deliver chicken-corpses to markets anymore. He works, underground, tending the machine. I’ve never seen this Machine. I don’t think anyone has. It exists, secretively so, and even those who see it every day—those like Tērō—describe it differently each time they speak of it. “There is no truth in Agara,” Tērō said to me once. “But there is beauty.” I remember those words and they stir me profoundly. There is no truth in Agara, and yet Agarans are profoundly honest people. “What is truth?” Tērō asked me, one day. I don’t remember what trite cliché I’d told him in response. We walked together in a park near the river. He’d pulled off his shoes and his socks, and walked in the water, scaring ducks and laughing at their quacking, territorial belligerence. He showed me a Catalpa tree. I recognized it for its leaves and its bean-shaped seed pods. I’ve always seen such trees in the USA. I’ve heard them called by their native name, Catawba trees. Native Americans regarded such trees as totemic. A similar species grows, native, in far Eastern Asia. Catalpa trees are global, now. They are not native to the European continent, however. “These trees have grown in Agara for thousands of years; long before European political flatulence sent Columbus to the so-called New World, these trees grew in Agara. They are not related to the Asian species. No one brought them here…and yet they have existed for thousands of years, right here. Our local and most ancient gods were born in the seed pods of one such tree.” History, among the people of Agara, is not a reliable source for the truth and so there is no truth in Agara. Only beauty. Tērō said so. And whenever I see Catalpa trees, no matter where, I think of my friend and his strange, mechanical country, and I wonder how and why the paradox of Agara remains steadfast, when the entire world changes like a fickle wind: quickly and without warning. (—Excerpt from: The Dishonest Truth by Ian McHendricks/University of Chicago Press, 2003) *** 2011 might just be an interesting year for Agara and its continual, slow unfolding. Well, for me at least. As for this picture, the blur appealed to me for some reason, which is why I didn’t delete it. The tale above grew from my impressions of that blur, and as always: Thank You for riding along on this quick ride to Agara. This image and text are both dedicated to Helle (helanker) for numerous reasons, including friendship and her recent "Urban" posts; they feel like Agara. I wonder if she's been there.

Comments (21)


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praep

2:02PM | Thu, 13 January 2011

Beautiful my friend - have a great day.

)

Wolfmanw

2:07PM | Thu, 13 January 2011

Wonderful capture and information

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SSoffia

2:33PM | Thu, 13 January 2011

Fantastic image & composition :)

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lwperkins

2:56PM | Thu, 13 January 2011

I like the border between the green and the brown, and how the leaf looks like a little boat, ready to explore the grassy sea! I think the Agarans are right about history.

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jmb007

5:01PM | Thu, 13 January 2011

belle image

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flavia49

6:13PM | Thu, 13 January 2011

fabulous prose and image!

SerenityBlue

6:42PM | Thu, 13 January 2011

Although I love the image, I find your writing far more fascinating.

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Orinoor

7:27PM | Thu, 13 January 2011

The leaf looks like it has withered the very grass beneath it, much like a walnut tree leaf would do, so acidic in it's nature. It makes me wonder what creature might have erupted from this leaf.

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MrsRatbag

9:16PM | Thu, 13 January 2011

I love the feeling of a black matrix that seems to underlie this image; beautiful work!

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kgb224

11:22PM | Thu, 13 January 2011

Stunning art work my friend.

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RodS

11:53PM | Thu, 13 January 2011

Excellent work, my friend!

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auntietk

2:45AM | Fri, 14 January 2011

The quality of the photography told me right away that this image was made in Agara. That alone makes it something to behold. I hope 2011 is a good year for Agara and its people ...

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helanker

2:53AM | Fri, 14 January 2011

Chip ! I think I have been in Agara, when I was a little girl. My brother and I were alot of places, on strange planets and we saw strange aliens and plants. Some of them were dangerous, others were sleeping plants. You could dive into them and sleep :-) My brother was the wonderboy TIM and I was his assistent Ella. lol! We played this game for a couple of years. Thank you for this amazing dedication. A wonderful shot and postwork and I loved the nice narrative :-) Thank you; also for the good memories for my childhood.

)

lick.a.witch

3:36AM | Fri, 14 January 2011

Wonderful narrative and an image that to me, shouts 'hope'. ^=^

bakr

6:13AM | Fri, 14 January 2011

Wonderful ,Very cool color combination with the emergence of green in front, and the spread of golden color in the background Excellent

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bimm3d

10:55PM | Fri, 14 January 2011

wonderful!!

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danapommet

9:14PM | Sat, 15 January 2011

A beautiful capture and I like the veining in the leaf. Outstanding narrative, to the point that I am find myself trying to visualize Tērō’s machine. I will have to Google Ian McHendrick. Dana

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mgtcs

11:51PM | Sun, 16 January 2011

This is a marvelous photo my friend, fabulous texture and shadows, fantastic capture and dedication!

)

durleybeachbum

10:18AM | Mon, 17 January 2011

Very interesting! I missed this for some reason.

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beachzz

10:45AM | Mon, 17 January 2011

I thought I'd seen this already, but somehow missed it. The foto is a story unto itself, but your words give it even more presence. Super shot--and words, of course!!

)

Joko-Style

7:23PM | Thu, 10 February 2011

Beautiful!


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Photograph Details
F Numberf/2.8
MakeCanon
ModelCanon PowerShot A1000 IS
Shutter Speed1/15
ISO Speed80
Focal Length8

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