How Photographs Can Help You Predict the Future

Everyone has the opportunity to be an artist today. Are you aware of what your pictures are saying? Regardless of what side of the lens you are on—photographer or subject—there’s more going on than meets the eye.

Photographs don’t simply capture a memory. They document our state of mind.

Consider pictures of people. Experts say the subjects’ placement and body language say a lot. Are the subjects close together? Which people are closest to the ‘power’ figure? Is anyone touching, or distant, from one or another person, or the group? If there was a professional photographer, is the positioning strained and unusual? In candid shots, can you detect discomfort or disapproval—of a person or the situation? Or of being photographed?

Camera’s today are as prolific as smart phones, jamming digital space with quick shots of self,friends, and silliness. This access to a camera also means that everyone has the opportunity to develop an artist’s eye. Some guidelines are useful.

Images that need descriptions I think of as ‘industrial’ photographs. Art is self-evident.

I didn’t see the bee, but she makes this shot nicer.
I didn’t see the bee taking this, but she makes this shot nicer. Yes?

Taking photographs, I was once instructed, is improved by listening to good music. This suggests that seeing is a matter of becoming aware of our senses, working them together.

Facebook snaps often require description. The thumbnails might be magnetic and draw us to the larger image. And photos of people might improve with identification of the faces. But, an artistic photo speaks for itself.

2. Even for world leaders, selfies act as a reminder of our fragile Screen Shot 2016-07-05 at 2.04.57 PMselves and our humanity. Selfies are instigated by insecurity, novel photography, peer pressure.

There is a useful and very personal role for actively taking pictures. It takes only a little more time than point and shoot. We might think of it as conscious photography—or just using the lens to see.

Buddha said we have put our current reality in motion with our past actions. It follows therefore, we can put our future into motion today.

Seeing the world through photographs is a subtle way to look at our mind. How we see suggests how deeply we see. To see how deeply we are seeing—just watch the eyes of people as they view your photos.

If my photos create delight or awe—“Oh my” or “Wow!”—I feel like I’m on the right path. A neutral comment like “nice” or “very pretty” though, I take as a warning. I’m just not putting in enough thought into my shutter clicks.

3. For your own sake—and others—please heed this important message:
Photo ResponsiblyRobert Bailey Copyright 2018

Our photos reveal our living mindset. To conscious photography beats biofeedback or therapy. It’s simple and shareable—and it can be very peaceful.

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Sunset Hampton Bays, 2016
 

Help! Bring Back Mystery!

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The Magician. An interesting visual opportunity. Taken at The Leopard Lounge, April 23, 2016.

It may be too late: We have grown blasé.

Many urban Americans do not cook, but they will never starve: delivered cooked food is a cellphone call and an agonizingly long 20 minute wait away.

We have far more information at our fingertips than we can ever use, but now we can store new information (to us) in a digital cloud,  for later…

Luxury is SO available to so many, some hotels manage the encroachment of lesser wealth by offering ultra-exclusive facilities within their already exclusive facilities.

If you are unsurprised by these observations, thank you, because you are helping make my point.

There is little surprise to grab and challenge our attention AND imagination anymore. We are in danger of accepting whatever happens, with little involvement on our parts, especially if it makes a lot of people happier. [Maybe this is why Trump and Sanders are interesting as Presidential candidates. The shakeups they invite a sort of mental awakening! ‘Oh, we could do that, here…?’ Yeah, maybe.]

“Codebreaker” is the story of Alan Turing–it is available on Netflix. As you know, Turing cracked the enigma code, the solution instrumental in defeating Nazi Germany. Yeah okay, So I know that(!) you may be saying…

Good.

What I did not know was that he was a true genius. Prior to his work at Bletchley, Turing wrote a 38-page paper that laid out the foundation for today’s computers. The digital backbone of ones (1) and zeros (0) he recognized could perform multiple and varied computations without people doing them. Even when the British government turned against Turing, on indecency charges, he wrote other papers. One of these was the mathematical calculation of how animals get their stripes (zebra and tigers) and spots (fish and leopards, for example.) These hidden puzzles were Turing’s mysteries.

Every successful person tackles mysteries–it is what drives them.

Walt Disney wondered if audiences would become emotional over a cartoon, in 1938, his Snow White overwhelmingly proved that we do. Nicola Tesla challenged the common notion of electricity in the early 1900s with the idea of turbines (AC) that would provide a greater amount of power at a lower cost more regularly than batteries (DC). He often looked at clouds imagining how this could be so, then in his lab, he sketched out the physical plan and built the test model.

I have mysteries in me, and I am glad I do.

Mystery makes us all more alive. Beyond that, it is nice to discover something that is truly new.

Flow and the richer life

Flow? Screen Shot 2016-02-11 at 1.39.03 PM

I first heard about the concept nearly 20 years ago from a friend. A Hungarian psych researcher had observed what he felt is a repeatable process of optimizing our life experiences. His name is now part of the lore of excellence, Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi.

Many were AMUSED to find that sex is a reference for understanding how flow works as an unrestrained acceptance of what we desire. Csikszentmihalyi called it the autotelic experience: auto, meaning self and telos meaning goal are its lingual roots.

Flow activities are those where we are able to perform at our peak ability. He wrote: “Surgeons speak of their work: ‘It is so enjoyable that I would do it even if i didn’t have to.'” This is no J-O-B. The personal reward of the effort is mainly in the doing.

Fast forward 20 years, and add to Csikszentmihalyi’s work a bit of post-psychodelic awareness among high IQ individuals. Their sense of the ‘expansive possible’ was elevated far beyond previous boundaries of all sorts–demographic, geographic, spatial, energetic. This brought forth a business related marker for hyper-growth, Steven Kotler’s idea of the MTP, a massive transformational purpose.

We can point to Bill Gates’ DESIRE for a computer on every desk and Steve Jobs’ PASSION for developing at first a ‘bicycle for the mind’ and then changes in how to DOMINATE another 3 industrial categories would operate; music, telephones and television. Currently we can observe how Elon Musk’s three businesses Tesla, SpaceX and Solar Cities converge in their profit catching and engineering crossovers so Elon can reach his MTP of INHABITING Mars.

Now, thanks to the work of several hungry individuals namely, Steven Kotler and Peter Diamandis, flow principles are being further assessed and tracked. They have made it possible to try flow out for little or nothing to see what we think and feel about our possibilities.

It may be interesting that flow has yet to be APPLIED in a serious way to such mundane tasks as governance and political decision-making, but it doesn’t take long to realize why sports and moneymaking have been the most receptive paths for testing flow.

The batwing suits worn by freefall athletes and Laird Hamilton’s hydrofoil surfboard are just the beginning in flow sports. In their book “Bold”, Diamandis and Kotler clearly lay out both the principles of exponential business growth and the “how to” of doing so. These just scratch the surface of the potential, according to Steven Kotler. And he has invested a lot of money to demonstrate some next possibilities.

It may be enough to know that flow lives in opposition to mediocrity, but those who practice and ACTIVATE flow are oblivious to this.

They’re simply too busy, having fun, living to the max.

You can see more here–and get your free Flow Profile.
http://www.flowgenomeproject.com

 

 

Seeing A Place Through Its People: Dede Pickering

One of my favorite photographers happens to also be a friend. A funny friend with a great husband and a complementary sense of humor that survives hurricanes, modern family feuding, and numerous inconveniencesScreen Shot 2015-06-16 at 10.34.53 AM of occasional living on the road. Maybe this is how she
began seeing places through people.

It would be a mistake to stop here, as in “they’re really cool, Mom.” There is more–much more. Her photography website, beside being loaded with images of interesting strangers and color and contemplative schemes, carries a statement of conviction and all too rare seriousness about problems.

And photography’s role out of mega gigabyted global haste?

My photographs are meant to be a bridge between cultures
and to express the universal human spirit. I photograph to
raise awareness and financial support on behalf of the
global community. When I found a way to combine 
my love
of travel and photography to benefit humanity, everything
changed and my life came together.

There it is in words. Her words.

Just wait until you experience what Dede sees… and how.

www.DedePickering.com

Evidence of Perfection in Our Time: Steely Dan

Screen Shot 2015-01-30 at 5.45.30 PM   If Steely Dan was starting out today, would they be heard?

[Your response.]

Why would this be so?

Cerebral lyrics and jazz crossover riffs are the stuff of an era of exploration. Oh yeah. Drugs. And yeah, questions. Everywhere. 

 

Exploration of lifestyles. Not for others. But for yourself. Fun and work refining enormous talent, wit, re-playing songs until they’re almost right (never ever perfect to Becker.)

Not what we’re seeing now. Slack electronic shrieking where a thought is about the color of your clothes, or the newest restaurant. Intellect? Pah! What is that?

These are self indulgent times. Granted, I am listening to Steely Dan on my Sonos system and a computer generated version of “Katy Lied” and “Any Major Dude.” But in my defense… I am loving it no less than I did when played off vinyl (which I have, still.) Those lyrics… what do they mean? They are so… involving. They aren’t mindless. But I want to be on the inside of that! (And I struggled to be.)

The world might be a slightly more sensitive place if we were less self-absorbed. It might still become worse (Clockwork Orange?) if pop commodities become scarcer and if this is possible more shallow.

Well beyond the creative and churning 70s, 80s and beyond… I’d like to share the delicious jazzy sounds and sinewy lyrics of Steely Dan with as many as will listen.

Listen:

I’m not one to look behind I know that times must change
But over there in Barrytown they do things very strange
And though you’re not my enemy
I like things like they used to be
And though you’d like some company
I’m standing by myself
Go play with someone else
I can see by what you carry that you come from Barrytown

It’s not personal, neither is it offensive. It’s the observer sharing neutrally what he sees. Take it or leave it.

But there’s a bigger point.

This a lyric for our times. But most people who know the lyric will miss it, have forgotten it, or don’t have time.

You, of course, embrace the lyric. And I can see, because of it, you’re not from Barrytown.

Dive deeper…