Erik van Straten
Veteran
Time passes quickly and photography is a means of retaining some of it.
Erik.
Erik.
leicapixie;n4797294 <snip> It is a compulsion.[/QUOTE said:Fortunately not prosecutable.
but the Real Question is Not a Whodunit but Why do it ?
I have come to acknowledge that when I did so because of some sense of obligation that there was seldom any usable results and I really did not have the best time.
Ahh...! Now if we're gonna get philosophical, it goes a little deeper than the weather and medical conditions. "Why?" is perplexing to me. Doesn't compute with my small brain. The "why" of photography is like asking me why I breathe. It's part of me. It's a process that I can't live without. It's developed over the decades and I'm pretty good at it today. But even when I was a newbie and trying to figure out how to take a decent picture, I felt it was something special, a balm for my soul. Even when the prints only ended up in the trash can or, today, when the images end up victims of the "delete" button, I felt/still feel a sense of fulfillment. Gotta do it. Like breathing.
There is a fellow on Flickr with Lou Gehrig's disease, ALS, who photographs, but not much anymore.
There is a wonderfully talented photographer here on RFF Colton Allen Swift1 (http://www.coltonallen.com/about/) with ALS that takes amazing photographs. I wonder if that’s the fellow you were referring to. I haven’t seen him posting much since the redesign and hope he’s ok.

Ah, all those handsome youngsters! I remember those days! 😍 Sad to no longer be one of them. 😢I take my M9-P and 28 Summaron M on my morning walks by the river almost always, even when I’m unwell of late. Indeed especially because I’ve been unwell. But often I don’t take a picture. Or, because of the Leica, I get a lousy picture, better taken with the iPhone. Not many rolls of film used lately, but my first roll of Kodak Image Pro 100 out of the Leica II was dropped off for development yesterday. Early in the year when I was well I was walking along the kerb of the little roadway to the rowing sheds, an exercise to improve balance and recruit gluteal and other muscles neglected in office work, when a tribe of teenage girl rowers with smiles and laughter and almost taunting challenges, enveloped my path on both sides of the kerb, brushed past me, and were gone. I had the camera with me but was unprepared. The boys eventually met my preparedness last week. Just to create opportunity I sometimes don’t take the camera. And of course, when it’s obviously a schoolgirls’ morning, or any of the young ones really, and particularly if I have the camera, I turn back for home well before the boat shed forecourt and the boat landing.
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