Tuesday, 21 October 2008

Born Running.....Into the Light

I'm on my way tomorrow.
If all goes well, I'll be back here by the end of the month.

From all the time back to the beginning from this very now, there is one keyword, a leitmotiv to this Born Running.
That word is: survival.

 

 


Tunnels; light; the shadow.
I wish that you all stay well and safe. see you next time.
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Monday, 13 October 2008

The Free World

How strange....Did I miss something? Why have both Ruth and Virginia written comments to the previous post that show they are both thinking about the beggar outside the bank? Extraordinary. Yes, it is a powerful photo, but still, it's a strange coincidence, isn't it?
They are everywhere, in their solitude, invisibility, isolation, presenting a blot, a foul-smelling bad stain right in the middle of the rich folks' party (which does still go on, despite the perfect tsunami of a finacial crisis, rest assured).
Here they come!!!
 

 

 

 

And seeing these, perhaps I am starting to understand a possible reason why Ruth and Gi were thinking of that homeless man and his dog and wheelchair. I think that many among we friends know that it isn't so difficult to fall through the net, particularly in times when the holes get bigger. Chance. Circumstances. Oh, enough of this, I have enough to deal with for the moment, that I'm not dealing with at all well.
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Tuesday, 7 October 2008

An Aside from the Saga: News

This is an aside from what I intend to create as the “Born Running” saga, which is fine and comfortable, nestled inside my head where it has been – too comfortably nestled to find a way out for the past year or so.
This is as near as I can get to coming home, at least an online home. All the responses from all of you have been wonderful, warm and more than I feel I deserve really. All of you still there from before, and now some surprising, wlecome new arrivals from the World of Photography, better known as woophy. Sejam bem-vindos, Laura, Gi e Miguel! This is where you can find me, because I just can’t seem to write personal mails anymore, as you have surely noticed.
I had already become pretty withdrawn, even insular, this year before the discovery at the end of July of my Triple A (I like this name; at the precise same time that as the term becomes extinct as a credit rating for anyone except J.K. Rowling, I acquire it as a life-threatening condition….Lol!....gallows humour!!).
One can only take so much loss and imprisonment without compensations.
Since then, I have fallen into a process of removing myself even further from anywhere that I felt I didn’t belong anymore and anybody who I felt that I increasingly couldn’t respond to like previously. I didn’t do that to hurt anyone. It is just a consequence of a dire situation grown even more dire.

However, this feels like home. It IS different here. A blog allows space and freedoms. A home for words, emotions, thoughts, images, photos, and the door is always open for trusted visitors – who are always welcome. If anyone arrives who isn’t welcome, then it’s easy – they are simply barred from entry! “Very nice, 5!!” doesn’t exist here.
I have almost entirely lost photography now; I hope and wish that is temporary. Until 2 years ago, I lived photography and through photography almost every day. Its loss was inevitable, but nonetheless a cause of more pain and grief for me. Among the consequences of the loss is that (1) I started to hate to see either my own photos, because they are all from a lost past time and life; (2) it has become unbearable to see the fruits of hundreds of other people who live lives that enable them to continue shooting photos day after day, simply because they have something that allows it, that I would call ‘normality’, although I know it’s not the right word. So many other people besides me have profound difficulties to deal with. Photography has the power to absorb us and help us escape all the bad for a while. I know all about that. But when you have nothing to see, nothing to observe, no beauty of any kind, only ugliness, ignorance, dirt, chaos and mundanity, then you (or I at least) can be stripped of your urge to look, and to point a camera at what is in front of you. [Actually, I shot these pics below last Saturday, not a usual day here in VF Xira. Favourite is the autumn's first returning marine cormorant]

Anyway, to return to the main point of this bulletin: I spoke with my specialist yesterday, after some weeks of silent reflection and unhappy resignation; I apologised to him, but asked him to accept that I couldn’t go into explanations, but doubted that he has ever had, or will ever have another patient like me. He accepted.
I can’t go on being selfish; there are others suffering much greater stress over this on my behalf, and that is not right, or fair. I can’t risk others’ health and lives like I have risked my own. I concede that I owe it to try, even if it does not thrill me one milligram.
In view of my commitments this week and his next week, we have agreed that I will go into hospital on Wednesday 22 October and be operated on the next day. Provisionally, because the Triple A has clearly grown in the past few weeks. I am now feeling “twinges” and strange alien sensations, which is all part of it, if you are fortunate enough to have any symptoms. So, naturally, I am more afraid now than before of something bad happening between now and 2 weeks from now.
Today has been a bad day. I haven’t felt well at all since I woke up, but can’t identify it, other than a bit dizzy, an occasional rolling sensation in my heart, which has been there intermittently for 2 months, and weak and tired. So nothing got done, until I wrote this at 6.30 pm!


 

 

 

 
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I am gratified if I have managed to do anybody any good. As for that word “failure”, believe me, I know why I use it and I will not be deterred. You, on the other hand, will just have to wait until it is coaxed out of its comfort zone. In fact, I see that much of what I wrote above, about my feelings on this impending operation, can only have any chance of being understood by anybody else if I succeed in writing the “Born Running” saga.


Gracias a la vida, eh?

Wednesday, 24 September 2008

Born Running




I was born running – almost literally.
Nine months later, I was already able to walk.

I was born in late-November, a true Sagittarian, in the year of the tiger.

I was born probably under grey skies, in the middle of the 20th century.

I was born in the middle of a place that had, 10 autumns earlier, suffered the brunt of the Nazi bombing storm on my native city and country.

I was born 5 years after peace returned to Europe; so, in a place and a time that was, most surely unwittingly to my family or any of those around me, to prove in the years to come akin to winning a lottery jackpot.

I was born into a family deeply scarred by tragedy, more of which was also to attempt to assert its total dominance on us in such a short time ahead.

I failed to die as I was expected to when I was only 20 months old, unlike my preceding brother, who succumbed to meningitis in the war-year spring of 1943, only 14 days after the birth of my sister, so that I became widely known as the ‘Miracle Child’, who had clung to life in the immediate aftermath of an appalling kitchen accident, when a young intern doctor, late into the first night in hospital, replied to my father’s tortured plea to know what were my chances of survival, since having lost their first son, they would not be able to stand losing the second:
“Well, there isn’t very much of him, is there?”
He then asked my father as the two of them stood in the silence, looking down at my terribly scalded body, me face down and tied like a political prisoner in a police state by wrists and ankles to the 4 corners of my cot, as if it were a jail cell:
“Mr Scott, do you have faith?”

Poor, wretched, desperate Mr Scott answered “Somehow, still, I think so. Why?”
“Because I’m going to ask you to go home now and pray. Stewart is no longer in our hands, there is nothing more we can do to help him pull through, only monitor. He may survive, but it will not be because of any miracles that we have”.

And wretched, wracked Mr Scott did just as the young doctor bade him.

6 months later, I went home. A miracle? Here I still am. However, no journey is that simple.

There is a long road between that distant, unremembered “then” and today. It is all – in so many ways – explained by that flashing instant of “then”……….

**********************************************
The deaf can hear
the trees singing among themselves;
The blind can see
into the souls of the flowers;
The dumb can speak
the purest poetry to the birds.

And what can we, perfect, do?

Hear unanswered pleas for help;
See blood flowing on streets of shame;
Speak obscenities.

________________________________________


Les sourds savent entendre
se chanter les arbres;
Les aveugles savent voir
dans l’âme des fleurs;
Les muets savent parler
la poésie la plus pure aux oiseaux.

Et nous, parfaits, que savons-nous faire ?

Entendre les supplications ignorées au secours;
Voir s’écouler le sang dans les rues de honte;
Parler des obscénités.


_______________________________________



That child wrote this:


“I am living in the only place I belong…………In my head.
It is dark, cold, lonely, desolate.
The walls are too thick for anyone outside to hear me or see me.
They are not thick enough to keep out either the sounds and sights of a cruel and stupid world, or the knowledge of everything that I couldn’t find, do or be.
This is where I belong, alone in here with all my failures”.

Wednesday, 3 September 2008

The Pavão de São João

This is the Peacock of St John, which I created from a firewqork pic and a peacock pic for the friends in Porto in June, as a present for their city's saint's day.
It is what I want to come back here with.

It is so great to have you old friends all near at this time. How amazing, the way in the space of 6 days, there were mails and woophy comments - Ani & Ruth within an hour of each other last week, Auds a few days before, but also watchful words from Terry, Jenny, Ana-Pequete, Mimi, going back through the summer. And I couldn't respond.
It is also great to have the "new" friends of woophy there too.
Ruth, your news......I am so proud of you! And what timing to announce it! Tomorrow marks 2 years since my mother-in-law, Leonor died. The reason I came to this town, my mission completed, then the one that followed as a result.
Ruth, this was an uplift and if I helped in any way to put you on that roiad, then I can be happy. But it has been your long walk, that only you can make, like any of us. I want to know how you got there, but for now, it is to feel some joy and to wish you all the best in the world with the next step up in your studies. It sounds more like a giant leap. Go there!!!!!

Today has been strange. People are sending me messages of encouragement, offering prayers, strength, solidarity. They are concerned. Some have done more than send words since this situation broke the surface on July 29 and gave me a month of tests, specialist consultations, scans and a 3-day hospital stay 2 weeks ago for more tests.
It is the "Curse of the Scott Boys". it is my turn, but I am the youngest it has picked on. I have an already-large abdominal aortic aneurysm - known in the trade as a Triple A, but it's no impeccable credit rating.
I will have to explain more, but not now. I have tried for over a week to write this and I find it hard, after these 2 years of being softened up, made more vulnerable and fragile simply by trying to battle and live in this terrribly negative place, in these conditions that give me nothing that I need.
And after all that, this has to happen. Can you understand that I am not prepared - emotionally, spiritually or materially - to face what the specialist wants me to do by the middle of this month? Go in for major surgery then 2 months in limbo in the worst place possible? I have refused to go to tomorrow's booked myocardial test. How can they hope to understand? This is nowhere near a 'normal' life, whatever that may be.

I'll try to explain more next time. For now, the Pavão de São João for all my friends everywhere.

StewXXXXXXXX



 
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Tuesday, 22 April 2008

Values

I watched you arrive, one by one.
I waited for just one more and this morning, Analia found her way in.
I was only thinking of Ruth and Mick on the 7th, and honestly not expecting to see anyone, because the point was that I felt I just had to make this, as a rite.
But, you all came and I you were the ones, just you.
OK, I let a "stranger" in and have been helping Wendy's son in Oregon to make his school project ever since. That was pure serendipity.
To have you together - Ruth, Paul, Auds, Jenny, Mimi, Lucie and Analia - has been even more serendipitous, and has given an extraordinary feeling. the bonds still hold.
As Analia was last in, only she could remark on it. But Ani, what you didn't know was I was waiting for you!

If you should want to see photos of mine, you can find me in
http://www.woophy.com/member/SJS

A great community of 20,000+ and I amuse myself there every day. That's all.
Bless every one of you, my dear friends. Like I always say: Presume nothing.
 

 

 

 
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Sunday, 6 April 2008

For Ruth, for Mick

My very dear Ruth,
I haven't forgotten.
Even as this struggle goes on (in the wrong direction), I remember 7 April 2007 and all I can think is how terribly painful tomorrow is going to be for you.
But you have to see it through, like all the other 365 days past.
And I have every certainty that you will, whatever the pain.
I took these photos (miraculously, I assure you) just this morning. So these are fresh flowers.
And I thought of you and wondered. About you; about all of us.
There aren't words. There aren't answers to the questions.
Courage & strength, dear,sweet Ruth.
Love, as always,
Stewxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
 

 

 

 
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