An Unpolarized View of Stability
Saturday, May 16, 2026
 | | 16 May 2026 |
When possible even when I feel lazy I go out in my
bike (it has only 3 speeds) and go to Jericho Beach. There is a park on Point
Grey Road where I stop to take a photograph with my Fuji X-E3. When I did so
this day I had two thoughts. The first one is that somehow by underexposing my
shot one stop the sky looks like it has been polarized by having a polarizing
filter. I used to use these filters a lot with film but never with a digital
camera.
That other thought is, of course, of my Rosemary who
brought us from Mexico City in 1975. In a few years, thanks to her forward
vision I became an established photographer and by the 90s I was emulating my
journalist father.
The view of our skyline is far enough that one could
almost (not quite) believe it was that friendly 1975 Vancouver.  | | Easter - Burnaby 1977 |
Julian Barnes - Death & the Lemon Table I have something of those Canadian Monarch Butterflies
and birds that fly south. They guide themselves by locations on the way in
their memory. Like those butterflies and birds wherever I drive in Vancouver I
remember, “I went with Rosemary here.” It is an inescapable thought somehow
connected to the Julian Barnes concept of IAM which stands for Involuntary
Autobiographical Memory. These memories will not stop.
What that means is that I am constantly thanking
Rosemary for her vision and I do not take for granted that I live in a pretty
stable part of the world. I look at the photograph I took of my family in our home in Burnaby at Easter 1977 and I almost smile. It is a moment that will never come back although Jorge Luís Borges had something to say about first times. He said that those exact first times are repeated in our memory ad infinitum. I can only add that few of us (or at least this guy) never did think when I was taking such photographs that I would be looking back at that moment. We anticipate a future of activities but never the future of looking back at a past.
Bright Eyed Niña
 | | Niña 16 May 2026 | The Death of a Companion Friend Today
Saturday I scanned some roses to distract myself in thinking of the loss of my
male cat Niño on May 12th.
My friends
and family keep telling me that I still have his twin sister, Niña. Since Niño’s
death what have I noticed about her?
She is now
inseparable from me. She wants to be on top of me all the time. She is eating well but not too keen about going out to the deck to sun herself. I believe that her
attachment to me is that she no longer has any competition.
Because cats
have personality I wonder why we do not consider them to be persons. I am sure
that Niña understands and knows that Niño is gone. She is with me in some sort
of grief sharing.
Earlier this
morning, when I was scanning some of my roses, she wanted to get up on a chair
near me the way Niño often did. This she did and I was almost at peace.
Suddenly she
stares at me, bright-eyed almost like Niño did. I am sure she knows.
Asymptotes - The Calculus - Death & Niño
Friday, May 15, 2026
Hypars, Leibniz, Newton, Arthur Erickson and Félix Candela Infinity, An Insipid Equivalent of the Unfinished - Borges An asymptote
is a line or curve that a mathematical function's graph approaches infinitely
closely, but never actually reaches or touches. As the coordinates on the graph
extend towards infinity, the distance between the curve and the asymptote
shrinks to zero. Wikipedia
In 1962 a
professor called Chicurel (alas I cannot remember his first name) taught me at
Mexico City College the quantum theory and the calculus. The latter has in many
ways defined my life.
Just before
architect Arthur Erickson died he had dementia. At a function he sat alone as
nobody wanted to talk to him. I went up to him and told him that our mutual
friend Sean Rossiter had mentioned to me that he (Erickson) had been influenced by
Mexican/Spanish architect Félix Candela. I will never forget that for an hour we
conversed on hyperbolic paraboloids and the calculus.
Now with so
much death in my life of family (and my Rosemary) friends and on May 12 the
death of my male cat Niño I have been giving it all some thought while feeling
a deep melancholy.
Right after
Niño died I threw away his medicines, but kept his eating dish and the brush I
used on him every evening. Niña has been smelling the spot where he lay and
died in the morning of the 12th. Does she know? Does she remember?
When I used
to walk with Niño around the block(no leash) as my Rosemary taught me I came up
with the concept of “absent presence”. Without having to believe in ghosts I
could sense her walking with Niño. Now when I walk in that back alley will I
sense the presence of the two?
The calculus
pretty well tells us that nothing ends completely until it hits infinity. Note
the concept here of the asymptote curve that hits either the X or Y axis only
at infinity.
In this scan
of Niño’s brush and dish with a photograph I took of him two days before he
died I see a graphic memory of Niño’s persistence in my memory. The other image
is of a little spot on the bathroom floor. In the last weeks before he died he
could not climb over to his litter box so he began to poop on the floor. I
would clean it instantly as it was very difficult to remove once it had dried.
Somehow I missed this spot. Niño is dead,
and wherever I go in my house I can imagine him staring at me with those
intelligent eyes or begging me to feed him. Something of him including his hair
on the brush persists which makes my memory of him that much more substantial.
That Sturdy Camel's Back
Thursday, May 14, 2026
"The
straw that broke the camel's back" originates from an old, likely Arabic,
proverb regarding the cumulative effect of overloading a camel until a final,
tiny weight causes it to collapse. Wikipedia
I never give
my views on politics or religion to anybody. If I were to go to that country
down south I would not have any problems with admission as they would not be
able to find anything damning in my phone that would make them send me back to Canada.
Today I will
waver just a tad. Some years ago I went with my 8-year old granddaughter
Rebecca to Texas. At the airport we were picked up by my Austin, Texas former-school-friend Howard Houston. On our way to his home he promised a surprise for
Rebecca. We were unable to guess. The surprise was a large property that had a
camel and a burro.
As stuff
happens these days that defines any kind of logic I keep thinking that the
followers of George Washington live in a country with an extremely sturdy
camel. When will the camel shout “Enough!” and collapse?
As they say
down there, "I dunno.”
Red - Yellow & Orange
 | | Bottom left - Rosa 'Westerland' - Right- Rosa 'Meikaquinz' and top - Rosa 'Dr.Huey' 14 May 2026 |
The Death of a Friend & Companion When my cat
Niño died on the morning of the 12th, I was in shock and awfully
sad. I wrote about it and it sort of ameliorated my grief. His sister, not having any competition for my
attention, has been very cuddly with me.
But today
that shock became a terrible emptiness in which I see Niño looking at me with
those stable eyes and I think, “Why did you leave me?” At the same time I
understand he went on a very long walkabout the evening of the 11th
and I kept going around the block calling his name. I wonder if he just wanted
to go and die somewhere. But he did come back and provided me with comfort on
our bed to the last.
I have been
removing black spot leaves from my roses and fiddling around trying to keep
busy. Invariably whatever I do makes me remember the absent presence of the
love of my life that was my Rosemary.
I saw these
two very large (over 5 inches wide) roses, Rosa ‘Westerland’ and a rose that
Rosemary never got to see Rosa 'Meikaquinz'. The third rose, not as large is
the root stock rose Rosa ‘Dr. Huey’ that rosemary salvaged from our old
Kerrisdale garden lane.
The orange
Westerland, which I say smells like synthetic apricot jam, was the rose that
finally made Rosemary appreciate a colour she hated which was orange. She would
have been ambivalent of the pale yellow and odd-named Rosa 'Meikaquinz'.
Scanning my
roses in my oficina brings me some peace. But a few days ago on the 10th
and 11Niño was on a high chair next to me as I worked with my computer. He
liked to give me company. Only once did he walk on my keyboard and took me
hours to get everything back the way it was.
Niño I miss
you. You are here in the garden as an absent presence with that of my Rosemary’s.
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