When my older son, Noah, was only five (a few years ago), he had already discerned one of the core
meta-patterns of his dad's evolving pattern of imagery. Noah happily explained to anyone who inquired about "what that strange man with a tripod..." is doing, that...
"That's just my dad; he likes to take pictures of rocks, leaves and water."Later, of course, Noah's sense of his dad's meta-pattern grew deeper and ever more sophisticated; passing though
"my dad likes to catch subtle light as it falls on dilapidated buildings,", stalling, for a while, on
"my dad likes to take pictures of boring stuff," and eventually settling on
"my dad likes gentle, quiet scenes." I am often greatly impressed with the depth of my son's young perception of my meta-patterns, and his eloquence in expressing them.
The three photos appearing here - all taken this past weekend at (the Virginia side of)
Great Falls Park - are very firmly in the "rocks, leaves and water" class of meta-patterns; which is what I find myself going back to whenever I need to creatively recharge myself.
Patterns,
meta-patterns and
meta-
meta-patterns may all come and go (and I hope they
do keep coming and going, for change and evolution are the lifeblood of creation); but the pattern that repeats most often, and the one pattern that inevitably remains when the conscious "I" stops thinking, is what my son has known since he was five:
"Dad just likes to take pictures of rocks, leaves and water."
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