Dochtersions: Hello everybody! Under the name "dochtersions" I started, at the suggestion of my dear husband, in sharing my photos, fractals, and also some paintings, and other 2D art here at Renderosity. That was in January of 2010. I still use my two owls as avatar, which is a reduced image of one of my oil paintings.
The name "dochtersions" came into my head as only one, when I was looking for a name for my blog that I started in 2007.
This name is not that strange, as I know that God is my real father and mother at the same time, and I know that God loves me more and deeper than a man can aware of (or at least I think this way)
I live in the South of The Netherlands together with my retired husband. I've had various occupations. In my last job, I was working as an assistant to a paediatrician and a rehabilitation specialist. When I had children, I graduated "health awareness", and gave lectures on various topics, plus vegetarian cooking classes to teenagers.
My husband and I have together two daughters and four grandchildren. Which all live abroad, to be precise in Lacey (WA-USA) and Davos in Switzerland.
I've always been busy with all kinds of creativity. As a child I drew a lot, later pottery, needle art, tapestries, weaving, batik art, macramé, etc. Painting with oil was my last great hobby.
Around about the year 2000 I started having unexplained physical symptoms as well as insomnia, which was later diagnosed as having PTSD. It turned out that I had repressed a traumatized youth. However, the physical symptoms made that I no longer could be busy with my passions, the real painting, and other activities (f.e. reading books, gardening, travelling), which I was doing without a limit.
What I can stay doing well in limited form, is playing music on my mandolin and my guitar, and also to enjoy/listen my favourite music, which is including the cantatas of J.S. Bach and his sons , f.e. also music from G.F. Handel, G.Ph. Telemann, a.s.o. This is also the kind of music that my husband (on its church organ) and I (on my mandolin) play together.
After being diagnosed with PTSD a lot changed and I was forced to look for alternatives in which I could express myself. That is, that for years I started writing, and poetry, which go quite intense and as a sort of automatic. Unfortunately, my knowledge of the English language is not sufficient enough, so I write in my mother tongue, with sometimes a few exceptions. The thoughts come to my mind right at unexpected moments, and it’s wonderful, to surrendering to your train of thoughts.
In the encounter more and more of impossibilities, in connection with, f.e continuous pains, I learned to shift my gaze. Searching for distractions and alternatives, I learned to focus my happy mind on all the wonderful and admirable little things in the world around me.
My husband since 1968 Karel (kareldg on RR) bought a small pocket camera for me, and taught me to work with Fractal Explorer. Through my little Sony camera I learned to look differently, to see deeper; to see the details, the structure, how refined, and just so unique the small ones are in God's creation.
What is one of my daily tasks is trying to support people who suffer from PTSD, but they suffer more in an emotional way, and I can understand them and listen to their story (digital) they trust me.
Renderosity: What projects are you currently working on?
Dochtersions: Of course I would love to take more concrete technical knowledge to me (to acquire), and follow tutorials, how to work with Ultra Fractal, Mandelbulb, etc.. The capabilities of PSP investigate and experiment with it.
The manual of my current camera (Canon PowerShot SX50HS, and as pocket camera Panasonic DMC-TZ35, since 2020 I use a Canon PowerShot SX70HS). I would like to sift through, and experiment with it. But exactly that kind of things, such as reading comprehension, concentration, makes this especially, by the constant dominating intense facial pain, really impossible.
All in all, I continue to look for improvement, while in the meantime trying to be light-hearted, happy and hopeful, to be open to everything that's coming my way. I enjoy art, stay in the nature, the outer man/woman in me, the love that I've been given, to realize this, and to be thankful for. Wherever I am happy with is that I am able to meet so many lovely people through RR. Unfortunately, only digital, but I'm also grateful.
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Comments (18)
adrie
Gorgeous Christmas fractal artwork, Merry Christmas to you too my friend.
bobrgallegos
Very beautifully done! Merry Christmas!
rachris480907
Beautiful artwork, Mies! You are so talented! Wishing you and Karel a wonderful, wondrous Christmas and holiday season from Sheree and me! ~Robert
eekdog Online Now!
Neato! Merry Christmas.
jayfar
Absolutely fabulous and wonderful work Jacomina. I wish you and Karel a very happy day.
farmerC
Verbazend mooi werk.
VDH
Mies, een fantastische kerstster, prachtige vormen en kleuren, om van te genieten !! !!
kepp
superb image
netot
Beautiful color and textures, full of hope and happiness, Jacomina.
Richardphotos
wonderful fractal art. happy holidays
RodS
Gorgeous Apo render! Merry Christmas and Happy 2019 to you and yours!
miwi
Super composition,klasse Fractal!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
g1tip
Beautiful ! ! !
helanker
Wow so beautiful this is, Jacomina !!! You can do wonders with that program :)
anahata.c
Ditto, Helle: My apo art is so bad, I won't even show it to an insect...This is beautiful, and so luminous. You get very special light in your art: Here, it makes the stars---especially the front star (the big one in the center)---glow radiantly. Beautiful deep shadows too. And then all those wave-like forms in the background, like sea-waves jumping up for joy. ("Wir danken dir, Gott, wir danken dir" or "Jauchzet Gott in allen Landen" comes to mind when I see this...well, a lot of other Bach too...your art evokes Bach inside of me all the time; you have his counterpoint, his elation, his deeply complex interactions...) And you use black very effectively, too: to "set off" the rising waves and stars. And the flood on the bottom is shimmering and beautiful---a really fine choice, because it makes this gigantic wave look like a gigantic ship on a cosmic sea. Beautiful work, and perfect for Christmas. I hope your holidays have been joyful, and that the stresses of your everyday life have been pacified by the beauty of the season.
ia-du-lin
cool work
Chatar
Beautiful image, particularly the reflection from the water.
Glendaw
What a perfect image for Christmas Eve Mies.
Brings me to think of the three wise men and how they were led to the baby Jesus by the light of the shining stars.
The reflection on the water appears very realistic as they had to travel many miles and maybe had to cross some water on the way.