Dipping into Heraclitus's River
Wednesday, January 02, 2019
I can remember distinctly, exactly (well almost!) how old I
was (6), when I looked at myself and understood that I was me and that, somehow, I
then had a blurry idea of my individuality. Now 70 years later I find it
incomprehensible but easy to see how 70 years slipped by without me really
stopping (Heraclitus would have told me that would be impossible) time to
think, “How will I perceive or re-live this moment in a near or even distant
future?”
My Manila-born grandmother (but educated in 19th
century Spain) often told me, “Nadie te quita lo bailado.” This does not
translate so nicely into English as,”Nobody can take away the dances you have
danced.”
Thus I can look back at the many varied experiences that I
have had while living in Buenos Aires, Mexico City, Veracruz, Nueva Rosita,
Coahuila, Austin and now Vancouver.
Obviously I am a product of a different
century in which as a boy we had an icebox, no telephone or TV, no car and milk
was delivered by a horse-pulled cart. I flew in C-47s and DC-3s, 5s, 6s, 8s,
Comet 4Cs, Constellations and Super Constellations, Convair 990s and briefly in
the back seat of a A-4 Skyhawk of the Argentine Navy.
In this century I cannot understand how journalism and
photography is taught in universities or technical colleges. When these folks
graduate where do they get jobs?
In that past century I was paid to go to Europe, South
America, Mexico and the US to take photographs. I managed to get $3500 day
rates in the 90s to shoot annual reports for logging companies that are now
gone.
But more than anything is this Hegelian back-and-forth of
this time with that time, and a synthesis for this present, as I write this, I
marvel at what seemed simple things then that now are not only unattainable but
impossible.The times that created them are gone.
Consider this photograph of Salem getting ready to dance at
the Marble Arch. In my time I was privy to at least 8 changing rooms for
strippers in this city and a couple in Las Vegas.
In the political milieu of the times now, none of this would
have happened nor would you now be able to munch on a hamburger and sip on a
beer while watching a lovely woman take it all off. And when I did this in that
past, I did it without an ounce of guilt. Could that happen now?
My grandmother had it right. Those memories I had cannot be
taken away. All I can do is experience them and consider myself lucky and
thankful that I was able to dip (as Heraclitus would have said) into those
waters.