Wednesday, June 27, 2007

Photojournalism (3): Elements of lines and shapes

Update as of September 18, 2023:

If you’re a high school or grade school student in the Philippines who’s joining the photojournalism contest in the division, regional, or national press conference, I’m offering two free resources to you :

A. 900-plus interactive exercises on English grammar, vocabulary, reading comprehension, verbal analogy, etc (with around 200 megabytes total file size). The exercises have time limit and automatic scoring, with an average of 10 items per exercise.

Examples of these interactive exercises are: Common English grammar errors: Exercise 01 (nouns - confusions of number); Phrasal Verbs: Expressions with Go; English Placement Test (45 items).

B. 200-plus resources (JPG, PDF, MP4, etc.) on photography and photojournalism, with 600-plus megabytes total file size. For some examples of these resources, surf to the “Free photography e-books, cheat sheets” page.

For the download links and more information about how to use the interactive exercises, please surf to my “Better English resources and exercises” blog. Please inform your journalism teacher/schoolpaper adviser or your parents about these resources before downloading them.

If you have any question about downloading or using these free resources, please email me (after informing your journalism teacher/schoolpaper adviser or your parents). I’ll be able to reply to you within two to three days; if you don’t see my reply in your Inbox, check your Spam folder. Or, you can text me.

Also, if you win in the photojournalism contest at whatever level (district, division, regional, or national), you can send me your prizewinning pictures, and I will feature them in a blog post.

Atty. Gerry T. Galacio
gtgalacio@yahoo.com
0927-798-3138


Lines are the most basic component of a photographic image, and can be classified into two ways - physical lines, and imaginary lines of force and direction.

Physical lines

These lines are those that exist in the empirical world like painted lines on the streets or on the basketball court, the lines on a piece of paper and the bare branches of a tree suffering under summer’s merciless sun ... I know, I know, it’s such a corny line!

Imaginary lines of force and direction

This kind of lines exists only in our minds
like the rows of CAT cadets in a fancy drill competition below, the direction in which persons look, like these guys and girls all looking at the little girl with the pig tails at the extreme left, the dancers looking towards to the right; the direction in which moving objects travel, the imaginary lines created when we divide something up like a very real, very delicious pizza..

Rizal High School fancy drill competition 1995; vertical lines express movement and dynamism; photo by Atty. Galacio
Rizal High School Musical Theater 1993; imaginary lines of direction; photo by Atty. Galacio
Rizal High School 1995; imaginary lines of direction; photo by Atty. Galacio(Please take note that the pictures I will be posting to illustrate this series on photojournalism are more than a decade old, and thus leave a lot to be desired in terms of quality. I shot all these pictures using my Canon AE-1 Program camera and mostly Kodak Tri-X film. This film is reportedly the favorite of Sebastiao Salgado, considered as the world’s best photojournalist.)

Psychological effects of lines

Lines have profound psychological effects on the viewers;
for example, pictures containing horizontal lines evoke feelings of serenity, stability, while vertical lines have a sense of energy, grandeur. Diagonal lines, like those in the picture of the marching cadets above (the crossbands on their uniforms, their rifles, their left legs thrusting forward in cadence) express movement and dynamism.

Rizal High School Main Bldg 1995; psychological effects of lines; photo by Atty. Galacio Element of shape

Lines when joined together create two-dimensional shapes like circles, squares, triangles, rectangles, polygons, etc.
Shapes attract our attention first and foremost whenever we look at photographs. Everyday objects are rich sources of shapes; some shapes will be obvious like the painted circle in the middle of the gymnasium below, and the water hose (very first picture above).

Lines and shapes; photo by Atty. GalacioPhotography and pizza

Tim Burton is the world famous director of such movies as “Edward Scissorhands”, “Beetlejuice,” and “Batman” parts 1 and 2. One time, while he was doing post-production work on the Batman 2 movie, he got hungry so he ordered out for some pizza. He got a mild surprise when upon opening the box, he found several pictures on top of the pizza.

The pizza delivery guy, named John Pezzota if I remember right, was a struggling photographer working part time at a pizza joint to support himself. When he found out that it was Tim Burton who was ordering the pizza, he took a chance by placing some of his black and white pictures in the pizza box.

Well, Tim Burton did like the pizza, and the photographer’s dark somber style which suited Batman 2’s moody atmosphere. The result? The photographer got the job of shooting the movie posters of Batman played by Michael Keaton and Catwoman played by Michelle Pffeifer. Cowabunga!

Sunday, June 24, 2007

Photojournalism (2): Elements of photojournalism, with videos

Update as of September 18, 2023:

If you’re a high school or grade school student in the Philippines who’s joining the photojournalism contest in the division, regional, or national press conference, I’m offering two free resources to you :

A. 900-plus interactive exercises on English grammar, vocabulary, reading comprehension, verbal analogy, etc (with around 200 megabytes total file size). The exercises have time limit and automatic scoring, with an average of 10 items per exercise.

Examples of these interactive exercises are: Common English grammar errors: Exercise 01 (nouns - confusions of number); Phrasal Verbs: Expressions with Go; English Placement Test (45 items).

B. 200-plus resources (JPG, PDF, MP4, etc.) on photography and photojournalism, with 600-plus megabytes total file size. For some examples of these resources, surf to the “Free photography e-books, cheat sheets” page.

For the download links and more information about how to use the interactive exercises, please surf to my “Better English resources and exercises” blog. Please inform your journalism teacher/schoolpaper adviser or your parents about these resources before downloading them.

If you have any question about downloading or using these free resources, please email me (after informing your journalism teacher/schoolpaper adviser or your parents). I’ll be able to reply to you within two to three days; if you don’t see my reply in your Inbox, check your Spam folder. Or, you can text me.

Also, if you win in the photojournalism contest at whatever level (district, division, regional, or national), you can send me your prizewinning pictures, and I will feature them in a blog post.

Atty. Gerry T. Galacio
gtgalacio@yahoo.com
0927-798-3138


Elements of photojournalism (from Wikipedia)


1. Timeliness — the images have meaning in the context of a recently published record of events.

2. Objectivity — the situation implied by the images is a fair and accurate representation of the events they depict in both content and tone.

3. Narrative — the images combine with other news elements to make facts relatable to the viewer or reader on a cultural level.

Elements of Photojournalism



The best photographs in photojournalism, 1943 to the present, from Pictures of the Year International (POYi)


Best of POYi from Pictures of the Year on Vimeo.

Relevant articles and downloads on photojournalism



Stacy Pearsall, combat photographer for the US Air Force:

“By the time I was considered to be combat ready, I was aerial qualified and had attended ground survival and evasion courses, prisoner of war training, water survival school and close quarters combat training.”

“From the age of 21 to the age of 27, I captured over 500,000 images from over 41 different countries. I was considered the best photographer in the military and was the first woman to have won the Military Photographer of the Year twice.” (Read the complete article or download sample pages from her book.)



Articles

The Definition of Photojournalism: Looking at Ethics in Photojournalism; Basic Principles of Photojournalism; Photojournalism Careers: Looking at Photojournalism Degree Requirements; Photojournalism Photography: Capturing Events (Pre-Shooting); Preparing for Your First Shoot as a Photojournalist

Downloads

A Photojournalist’s Field Guide: In the Trenches with Stacy Pearsall (58 sample pages; 6.97 MB); Photojournalism Curriculum Guide – Texas Association of Journalism Educators (16 pages; 119.84 KB); Photojournalism history (42 slides; 36.33 MB); History of Photojournalism - Legacy Student Media (34 slides; 2.91 MB); Photojournalism in the U.S. and Germany: A Comparative View (44 slides; 2.92 MB)

Photojournalism videos


The Power of Photojournalism





7 Photojournalism Tips by Reuters Photographer Damir Sagolj (Thomson Reuters Foundation)



Photography Techniques: Photojournalism Tips From Ed Kashi (Advancing Your Photography)



Documentary Photography: Tips & Advice by Daniel Milnor (Advancing Your Photography)



The Best Of Photography Awards Pulitzer, World Press

Saturday, June 23, 2007

Photojournalism (1): "I Am A Camera"

Update as of September 18, 2023:

If you’re a high school or grade school student in the Philippines who’s joining the photojournalism contest in the division, regional, or national press conference, I’m offering two free resources to you :

A. 900-plus interactive exercises on English grammar, vocabulary, reading comprehension, verbal analogy, etc (with around 200 megabytes total file size). The exercises have time limit and automatic scoring, with an average of 10 items per exercise.

Examples of these interactive exercises are: Common English grammar errors: Exercise 01 (nouns - confusions of number); Phrasal Verbs: Expressions with Go; English Placement Test (45 items).

B. 200-plus resources (JPG, PDF, MP4, etc.) on photography and photojournalism, with 600-plus megabytes total file size.

To avail of these free resources, email me with the following information: your name and school; the name and email address of your journalism teacher or schoolpaper adviser (or that of your parents); the division, regional, or national press conference that you’re joining.

(I’ll be able to reply to you within two to three days; if you don’t see my reply in your Inbox, check your Spam folder. Or, you can text me.)

Atty. Gerry T. Galacio
gtgalacio@yahoo.com
0927-798-3138




Topics discussed in this blog post: Tragic story of photojournalist Sean Flynn; Creativity is in your heart and mind, not in your camera; 35 mm: film format and viewing system; What you see is what you get; Features of modern SLR cameras; Practical tip: always release the shutter button gently; Computers, digital cameras, and the future of photography; Decision-free photography; A camera for your schoolpaper; Types of digital cameras (infographic); How to hold a camera (infographic)

Using your Digital SLR (free e-book
from Photo Answers; 22 pages)

Types of digital cameras (see also the
graphic at bottom portion of this post)

Camera buying guide (Most important
things to know when shopping for a
camera)

How to hold a camera: getting started
with your new DSLR
(see also the
graphic at bottom portion of this post)

6 camera settings new photographer
find confusing (and we can see why)


“What camera should I buy?” - The 4
types of camera
(video)

Best Types of Cameras for Learning
Photography
(video)

TOP 5: Best Entry Level DSLR
Camera For Beginners 2018
(video)

DSLR Camera Basics Tutorial:
Shutter Speed / Aperture / ISO

(video)

How to Use a DSLR Camera: Learn
DSLR Camera Basics Shutter
Aperture ISO
(video)

How to take better photos with
your Android phone


iPhone Photography School (tutorials:
tips and techniques; weekly contest)

10 Tips To Help Improve Your
Smartphone Photography


7 smartphone photography tips for
taking better pictures


How to Take Better Pictures with
Your Smartphone's Camera


10 Tips for Good Smartphone
Photography - TechSpot
Sean Flynn, son of the legendary 1940’s Hollywood actor Errol Flynn, was a photojournalist who covered the Vietnam War in the 1960’s. Bitterly disillusioned by all the killings he witnessed and the horrors of the war, he set aside his camera but still continued going with the US Special Forces in their operations.

Sean was confronted by his best friend and fellow photojournalist Tim Page about this contradiction. With a lost look in his eyes, Sean pointed to his head and said, “The images are all in here!”

Sean disappeared after the Vietnam War; it is believed that he was murdered by the Khmer Rouge guerrillas in Cambodia.

(Tim Page is the author of the book “Page after Page” that was turned into the 1990s TV miniseries “Frankie’s House”; the book and the miniseries narrate Page’s odyssey in Vietnam and his friendship with Sean.)

The human brain is certainly an incredibly marvelous thing (more on this later), but we do need a camera to take pictures. Say “photojournalism” and the camera that comes immediately into people’s minds is the 35 mm SLR (single lens reflex) camera.

The SLR camera is used in all kinds of photographic work like sports, fashion, portraits, etc. It has an extensive system of interchangeable lenses ranging from ultra-wide fisheye lenses up to the super telephotos, which can shoot close up pictures of subjects more than a mile away, and numerous accessories such as motor drives, power winders, dedicated flash units, remote controlled operation, etc.

Creativity is in your heart and mind, not in your camera

Richard Avedon, known as the world’s number one photographer according to a 1996 survey, once said, “It’s not the camera that makes a good picture but the eye and the mind of the photographer.”
(Avedon’s most famous photograph is that of Hollywood actress Nastassia Kinski with a snake wrapped around her body.)

Don’t be discouraged if you don’t have the kind of cameras that you see professionals carry around. Use whatever camera that you may have, however cheap or old it may be.

As painter Pablo Picasso said, “There are painters who transform the sun into a yellow spot, but there are others who, thanks to their art and intelligence, transform a yellow spot into a sun.” An avid photographer, Picasso meant to say is that creativity is in your heart and mind, not in your camera.

For example, the 1947 Pulitzer Prize for photojournalism was awarded to a photograph of a woman jumping out from the window of a burning hotel. The picture was taken by Arnold Hardy, an amateur photographer, who bought his camera a month before the fire which claimed the lives of a hundred people. He took the picture with his very last flashbulb.

As someone has put it, photography really is both art and science. The term “EOS” in Canon autofocus cameras really stands for “electronic optical system” but the Canon company wants to be more poetic about it. So, it says that the term stands for “Eos”, the Greek goddess of dawn. Autofocus being the dawn of a new age for cameras, get it?

35 mm: film format and viewing system

We can break down the term “35 mm single lens reflex” camera into two components: one, the film format, and two, the viewing system. The “35 mm” portion of the term “35 mm camera” does not refer to the focal length of the lens but to the film format. The SLR camera uses the so-called 135 size film that measures 24 by 36 mm, loaded in cassettes holding 12, 24 or 36 frames (an accessory allows the use of film magazines with a total capacity of 250 frames).

Relevant article: “Film vs. Digital: A Comparison of the Advantages and Disadvantages” (PetaPixel)

What you see is what you get

The single most important characteristic of the SLR system is that there is absolutely no parallax problem. The image you see on the viewfinder is exactly the image you’ll get on the film. The SLR system of viewing allows you to see the image exactly as the film will record it. This system of viewing may be summed up by the term computer users are familiar with, WYSIWYG or “what you see is what you get.”

For you math nerds out there, it might interest you to know that parallax is also used for estimating the distances of the stars and other astronomical bodies. How? Well, if you know the distance between the real position of the star and its apparent location, and the angle between them from where you are, you will be able to measure the distance between you and the star. That is trigonometry, right? Right!

Free e-book:
Get More From Your Digital SLR
Photo Answers

(5.09 MB, 22 pages)
Features of modern SLR cameras

Everything (well, almost everything) is automatic like film loading and rewinding, film speed setting through DX decoders, and shutter speed and aperture combinations through sophisticated metering systems. The built-in flash fires automatically when needed, reduces red eye, and automatically balances ambient light with just the right amount of fill flash. Autofocusing (meaning the camera lens focuses itself without any help from you) is so sophisticated that cameras can focus on wispy clouds or on a zigzagging football player.

If you’d like to take a break but still be able to take pictures, you can use what is variously known as trap focus, snap-in focus or catch-in focus. You can leave your camera unattended, take your time doing something else, and when your subject hits the pre-focused spot, the camera will automatically fire.

All these have been made possible by microchips built into cameras. If you read the specifications for some late model cameras, you’ll notice that they use “fuzzy logic” or a system by which computers think like human beings!

Practical tip: always release the shutter button gently

Whether you’re using a manual camera or an autofocus camera with all the bells and whistles, so to speak, always gently press the shutter release with your right index finger when you are shooting your subject. Simply apply a little pressure to the release button; you’ll feel just a little tension on your right forearm when you do so. If you “jab” or “push” the shutter release heavily downward, you’ll have blurred images caused by camera shake.

How DSLR Cameras Work



Understanding DSLR vs. Mirrorless Cameras

Computers, digital cameras, and the future of photography

“From today, painting is dead!” This was the cry of doom and despair by French painter Laroche way back in 1839 when photography was introduced to the world.
History has proven him wrong, however; painting is still very much a flourishing art form. With the advent of personal computers and their revolutionary impact on almost all aspects of life, it seems it’s now the turn of photographers to exclaim, “From today, photography is dead!”

Photography is a technology-based art form. Since 1839, it has always been a silver halide-based art form, meaning we’ve got to have film in order to have pictures, until today that is. Now, computers and cameras have been fused together to produce film-less digital cameras.

Primarily, digital cameras use a charge coupled device (CCD) to record the images. Since the images are “digitized” as they’re shot, you can use them at once in your computer. Some digital cameras have LCD preview and playback monitor, video output for viewing images on television, sound recording, etc.

Decision-free photography

A lot of professional photographers, however, look down on “auto-photography” or “decision free” photography. These terms refer to the heavy, oftentimes complete reliance on the automatic features of today’s cameras brought by computers, microchips, and electronics.


These photographers think that relying on automation and electronics is a hindrance to a person’s creativity. These photographers want the best of two worlds, actually. They value the information, the assistance given by the automatic features of today’s cameras, but they also want what is known as “manual override” that is, they want to be able to turn off the camera’s automatic features and to rely on their brains, their experiences, their feelings, their sensibilities. In other words, they don’t want their cameras to take the pictures for them; they want to take the pictures themselves.

For example, Apa Ongpin, a popular tri-media personality, stated in a magazine interview many years ago, that he would sometimes go on photo assignments using 30 year old manual cameras.

A camera for your schoolpaper

In the regional press conferences (high school level), participants are often required to use SLR cameras, so schools have no choice but to purchase one or two cameras. If your school cannot afford to buy a brand new SLR camera, you can choose to buy a second hand camera, either from someone you know or in R. Hidalgo in Quiapo, Manila. Shoot one roll of film with the camera to see if it still produces good pictures. Me, I started learning about photography by borrowing the camera of my staff photographer, Luis (we called him “Tatay”), from QC Science High School way back in 1983. Oftentimes, he’d rather play football all day long than cover school events, so I ended up being the staff photographer myself!

For your schoolpaper or your annual, however, I would advise that you invest your money in a digital camera. It will make your publication work easier and eventually save you a lot of money.

My beloved Canon AE-I Program
camera with Vivitar 28-210 mm zoom
lens; I used it for 19 years to shoot
more than 10,000 pictures, including
all the black and white pictures in
this photojournalism series.
For 19 years, from 1985 up to early 2004, I used a Canon AE-1 Program SLR camera. This camera model (and its non-program brother) is the most popular ever in the history of photography, having sold more than five million units worldwide since its release in 1982. What else can I tell you? Canon SLR cameras, they’re beautiful, they’re okay.

By the way, if you saw the movie “Emong Salvacion” starring Eddie Garcia, you probably saw that scene where lead actress Beth Tamayo used a camera to record the activities of a criminal syndicate. That camera is a Canon A Series camera, although I could not quite make out the exact model (I only saw the movie trailer). What did I tell you? Beth Tamayo’s beautiful! I mean, I mean, I mean, the Canon SLR camera is beautiful, not Beth Tamayo! I mean, I mean, I mean, they’re both beautiful, okay?okay?okay?

A “program” camera is ideal for beginners since there’s no need to bother with shutter speeds and apertures. If you want your skills to improve, however, you’ve got to learn how to set your shutter speeds and apertures manually. Why? So that you’ll have greater artistic control over your photographs. You won’t simply be doing what is known as straight photography or turning out what some professional photographers derisively refer to as record shots. When I first started learning about photography, I was totally dependent on the “program” mode. Now I use my camera only on manual exposure or shutter priority mode. Okay!

I love my AE-1 Program camera, but the flash synchronization broke down after 19 years of use and after some 10,000 shots. I can still use it in outdoor shots, but I do a lot of shooting indoors at this point in time. I reluctantly had to switch over to a digital camera. For the last two years, I have been borrowing and using my sister’s Sony digital camera, and I have to admit, the picture quality is good. I have saved a lot of money which could have gone to purchasing film and batteries and paying for film processing.

By the way, the SLR probably isn’t singer/songwriter Alanis Morissette’s favorite camera. It’s probably a focus-free 35 mm compact camera. Why? Listen to her words in the song Hand in My Pocket.” The song say, “I’m free but I’m focused!”

A final note (or is it, a final shot?)

Medium format cameras are those which use the “120 roll film” that can produce very high quality pictures measuring up to several feet in dimension. Studios specializing in portraiture usually use medium format cameras (whether film-based or digital in format). This kind of camera, however, is not suited for photojournalism because they’re bulky and heavy. They are pretty expensive, too!

Do you remember those historic moon landing shots taken by the Apollo 11 astronauts Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin on July 20, l969? (Incidentally, the astronauts were apprehensive about stepping on the moon’s surface. If the theory of evolution was right and that the moon was several millions of years in age, the dust covering the lunar surface would have been several feet deep, and the astronauts could drown in all that dust. Well, the dust on the moon was only an inch or so in depth.)

Anyway, these memorable lunar pictures were taken with a medium format camera, specifically, the Hasselblad Data Camera which was a modified version of the Hasselblad 500 EL model. It had a 60 mm f/5.6 Zeiss Biogon lens, and had a 170-frame magazine capacity. What happened to this historic camera, you might ask?

Well, the Apollo 11 astronauts simply left it there on the moon. I have always wanted to have a medium format camera but couldn’t afford to buy one. Now I know where I can get one, free. Yes! Yes! Yes!

Types of digital cameras

http://www.gcflearnfree.org/digitalphotography/1.2

How to hold a camera (article from Digital Photography School with free cheat sheet originally from Digital Camera World; click the image to see the full-sized graphic in a new tab and then right-click to download/save the image)

http://media.digitalcameraworld.com/wp-content/uploads/sites/123/2014/06/How_to_hold_a_camera.jpg

Saturday, June 02, 2007

Photojournalism: Introduction

“Photographers are timekeepers”
Index of topics discussed in this post: Introduction; College days (photography and Nathaniel Hawthorne); The house on the hill (photography and National Artist for Literature Nick Joaquin); Photography and philosophy (“Blowup” 1966 movie; Candice Bergen as photojournalist Margaret Bourke-White in 1982 movie “Gandhi”); Learning by doing; Photojournalism and the various press conferences; Problems of school paper advisers and staffers in photojournalism; Photography is a hard taskmaster; The power of photography (“Stay, you are so beautiful!”); Nat Geo videos on power of photography to witness, to celebrate, to reveal, to relate, and to prove

Photojournalism has been a part of the division, regional, and national press conferences since 1989, and as a result, schools are finding ways to train their staffers in the field of photography. If you’re a school paper adviser, staffer, or a student taking up a course with a curriculum that requires photography like Mass Communications, Fine Arts, Interior Design, or you’re interested in photography as a hobby, this series is definitely for you.

I fell in love with photography when I fell in love with Hollywood actress Candice Bergen way back in my high school days in the 1970s.

You might know Candice Bergen as the star of the TV situation comedy “Murphy Brown,” but to my generation, we knew her as the lead star in the hit movie “Soldier Blue” (1970). She played the role of “Cresta Lee,” a strong-willed and resourceful woman who as a child, was raised by Apache Indians after her family was massacred. After being assimilated into the Indian culture, she planned to return to her American relatives in New York (if memory serves me right). But fate intervened, and the payroll convoy she was in was attacked by another group of Indians on the warpath.


Caution: “Soldier Blue” is an R-rated movie.
As the soldier “Honus Gant” (played by Richard Strauss) was pathetically weeping over the massacred US cavalry soldiers and reciting Tennyson’s famous lines from the poem “The Charge of the Light Brigade” (“Ours not to reason why, Ours but to do and die”), Cresta Lee was busy camouflaging herself and finding a way out of that horrible situation. Based on a historical incident, the movie ends with the massacre of hundreds of Indian men, women, and children by US soldiers, with Strauss bound in chains for helping the Indians and Cresta Lee leading what remained of her adoptive family into the reservation.

Caution: “Soldier Blue” is an R-rated movie.
I saw this movie about three times, and I simply couldn’t have enough of Candice Bergen. Imagine my delight, therefore, when I saw a copy of Life magazine with several full page pictures of Candice Bergen. I cut out her pictures and pasted them on my notebook. Believe it or not, but I still have that notebook with me after all these years! Two smaller pictures in that Life magazine showed her holding a camera and shooting pictures of a boxing match and flowers in a garden. The magazine article said that she was a very accomplished photographer. That image of Candice Bergen holding a camera remained in my mind throughout my high school and college days.

College days

Rizal High School gym 1992; B-setting; photo by Atty. GalacioI spent part of my college days in Philippine Christian University, where I graduated with an AB English degree in 1979. That teenage crush I had on Candice Bergen developed (no pun intended) my love for photography; the problem was, I didn’t have an SLR camera. One PCU student at that time was the unofficial school photographer, covering various programs, shooting candids of students and professors, etc. Every time I’d see him along the corridors, in the library, with his camera slung on his shoulder, I would wish that I also had my own camera.

Since I couldn’t afford to buy a camera, I became content with looking over and over again at Time and Newsweek magazines that carried a lot of advertisements for SLR cameras. I couldn’t understand then a lot of the technical terms and descriptions about cameras. I didn’t know, for example, the difference between a “35 mm camera” and a “camera with a 35 mm lens.” I just loved looking at pictures of Canon, Nikon, Minolta, Olympus, and Pentax cameras, wishing all the time that I had my own single lens reflex camera. (One camera model that really caught my attention was the Pentax K Spotmatic.)

I also began to love looking at things, situations, and people, imagining myself taking pictures. One time, I saw an old woman who was rolling two huge truck tires all by herself up a street across the public market in Mandaluyong. I told myself, “Hey, this would make a good picture!” Another time, I came across about a dozen CEU nursing students who were waiting to cross the street, looking prim and proper in their white, neatly-pressed uniforms with pink gowns. I thought that if I took their picture, I’d caption it, “In the Pink of Health.”

Going to PCU in the morning and coming home in the afternoon, I would always pass by P. Guevarra street in San Juan where I loved looking at the big, old houses. One two-storey house, rather worn out at the time, intrigued me so much. It must have been a gallery because it had a lot of paintings that were hanging on the walls (it’s now a fancy restaurant). Near the stone steps that led to the 2nd floor was a garden of sorts. I was reading Nathaniel Hawthorne’s stories at the time, and my lively imagination told me that this garden, especially in the rain, looked like the secret garden in his story “Rappaccini’s Daughter.”

What really attracted my attention to this house were the numerous statues of Jose Rizal in various poses, strewn about the garden. Everyday, when I passed by that house, I’d wish that I had a camera so that I could shoot those statues and that house. I already had a caption in mind: “We Need More of Him.” Sometimes I’d have the urge to open that gate, talk to whoever the owner might be and ask permission to haul the statues to our house in a nearby street.

The house on the hill

We lived in an old, two-storey wooden house perched on top of a hill, blessed with a sweeping view stretching from the faraway skyline of Makati to the buildings on Roxas Boulevard in Manila. In the afternoons when I had no classes and after I had fed the pigs in our backyard, I would lie down on a window ledge and stare at that great view for hours.

There was a santol tree in our front yard, and in the afternoons after I had helped my mother bring the refreshments that she sold in a nearby elementary school, I would climb the tree and watch the sun setting down behind a mountain across Manila Bay. One time, as I watched the late afternoon sun bathing that mountain in golden sunlight, it suddenly occurred to me that mountain must be the one shaped like a sleeping woman that National Artist for Literature Nick Joaquin described in his story, “The Woman Who Had Two Navels.”

We don’t live in that house anymore, and one of the great regrets in my life is that I didn’t have a camera then to take a picture of that mountain.

Photography and philosophy


Thomas, the lead character (played by David Hemmings), takes pictures in Maryon Park.


After printing his pictures in the darkroom, he begins thinking that he has taken a picture of a murder in the park.


The famous ending of the movie where Thomas watches two mime artists playing tennis.

Note: “Blow Up” has explicit scenes that are not suitable for young audiences.
I love watching old movies, and one movie that increased my desire to learn about photography was Michaelangelo Antonioni’s “Blow Up” (1966). The movie (based on a story by Julio Cortazar) opens with a scene of popular European model Veruschka in a photo session and tells the story of a photographer who shot some seemingly innocuous pictures in a park. Upon blowing up the pictures, however, the photographer begins to think that he has shot in one of his pictures a murder that occurred in the park.

The photographer begins investigating whether the murder actually took place, blowing up his pictures more and more. The pictures seem to tell him that indeed he had recorded a murder, but his investigation leads him towards a blank wall. At the end of the movie, the photographer goes back to the park one early morning, and he comes upon two mime artists playing tennis without rackets, without a ball, without a sound. As these mime artists began playing, serving and lobbing an imaginary ball over an imaginary net, the movie ends as a flash of recognition, of deeper understanding crosses the photographer’s face.

What attracted my attention most about this movie were the scenes showing the photographer in the darkroom. It was only after I’ve read Francis Schaeffer’s book “A Death in the City” did I come to fully realize what director Antonioni was trying to say through his movie. Philosophically, through the photographer’s failure to come up with empirical evidence of the murder which he thought he had captured on film and through that imaginary game of tennis one early morning in the park, Antonioni was saying that there was no absolute moral standard in the universe, that everything was relative. (See also “Modernism and Post-Modernism | An Analysis of Blow-Up.”)

Photography and philosophy ... what did Candice Bergen do to me! In l983 the film “Gandhi” starring Ben Kingsley and directed by Sir Richard Attenborough won as the Oscar Best Picture of the Year. A minor character in the movie based on the life of Mahatma Gandhi is that of Margaret Bourke White, a world-famous photographer for Life Magazine and the first woman to be accredited as war photographer during World War II. Guess who played that role? Who else but Candice Bergen!

Rizal High School; learning by doing

RHS class picture taking; natural frames; photo by Atty. Galacio Sometime in 1985, I bought my first and only SLR camera, a Canon AE-1 Program camera. Finally, I had a camera! At that time, I had just left Quezon City Science High School as journalism teacher and school paper adviser and had transferred to Rizal High School, where I worked until 1995. (From 1993 up to 2005, Rizal High School was recognized by the Guinness Book of World Records as the world’s biggest high school, with enrollment reaching 26,000 students at one point.)
My beloved Canon AE-I Program
camera with Vivitar 28-210 mm zoom
lens.

During that time, I took more than 10,000 pictures (mostly black-and-white) with my beloved Canon AE-1 Program camera, Canon FD 50 mm lens, and Vivitar zoom lenses (a 70-210 mm Series 1 and a 28-210 super zoom). I also used with my lenses either a green filter or a polarizing filter.

I started with films such as Negrapan (made in Barcelona, Spain) and the locally-packaged Colpan. I also tried Ilford HP 5, but later on, I primarily used Kodak Tri-X Pan because it was used exclusively by my idol, Sebastiao Salgado, the world’s best photojournalist.

I learned about photography through trial and error, by asking for help from other photographers, and by reading books and magazines. Every time I had the money, I would go to all the sidewalk stalls in Avenida Rizal to buy photography magazines. I would start from Recto, opposite Odeon Theater, and then transfer from one side to another of Avenida Rizal until I reached Plaza Sta. Cruz.
My RHS Class '92 students (Leili,
Stevenson, and Daniel) in our
makeshift darkroom

I enrolled in a 15-Saturday workshop in black and white photography. I was only able to attend about four classes, but I learned enough to start processing films and printing pictures on my own.

Together with my students, I processed the black-and-white films and printed the pictures in our school’s makeshift darkroom. I used the cheap, locally-manufactured Atlas developer and fixer; for the photo paper, I primarily used Grade 3 Oriental or Agfa Portriga.

I watched photo exhibits, and I learned by asking myself what made these pictures good enough to be exhibited. I integrated photography into my journalism classes to make them more interesting to the students; seeing several of my students begin to take photography seriously inspired me to learn more.

From photojournalism book to photojournalism blog


Based on some of the pictures that I took, I wrote a book on photojournalism way back in 1997. For the next two to three years, I went to numerous book publishers trying to get my book published, but to no avail. The book publishers told me that there was no market for the book.

In 2001 or 2002, a company called Pyra Labs created the “weblog,” a new platform for writing on the Internet. Pyra Labs was later on bought out by Google, which then transformed the “weblog” into the Blogger platform.

After studying basic HTML, I started this blog and several others in 2005. I rewrote the chapters of my photojournalism book so that they would fit the blog post format. I wrote 40 lessons on photojournalism for this blog; you can find the links to these lessons in the sidebar.

Since then, I have been editing these lessons to keep them up to date with developments in digital photography. I have also embedded relevant YouTube videos in some posts. (But the techniques of photographic composition are the same whether you're into film-based photography or digital photography.)

Photojournalism and the various school press conferences

RHS folk dancers; shapes; fill the frame; photo by Atty. Galacio Photojournalism has been a part of the division, regional and national press conferences since 1989. Last year, I was the lecturer and contest judge in photojournalism for the following seminars or press conferences:

1. Photojournalism seminar, Maria Montessori Christian School, Pembo, Makati, August 19, 2006

2. Photojournalism training and contest, District 5, Division of Pasig City and San Juan, Caniogan Elementary School, September 7 and 8, 2006

3. Photojournalism contest and Division Press Conference (grade school level), Division of Pasig City and San Juan, October 5 and 10, 2006

4. Photojournalism seminar, Santolan High School, October 20, 2006

5. Photojournalism lecture and contest (high school level) Division of Pasig City and San Juan, November 7, 2006

6. Regional Schools Press Conference, Region III, Talavera, Nueva Ecija, November 14-17, 2006

Schools are trying to find ways to train their staffers in the field of photography. A lot of schools and students are hampered, however, by the high cost of photography books and the lack of training workshops. What’s worse, some schools do not even have cameras; they rely on their students to provide the cameras.

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What worsens the problem of raising the level of photography is the lack of training, of materials, for the school paper adviser. It is a fundamental principle that a person cannot teach what he or she does not know. A lot of times, school paper advisers simply assign as the school paper photographer any student who shows even just a cursory interest in pictures. That student is then left to fend for himself or herself, to learn photography, to find a camera, and sometimes, even to fork out the money to buy the film. In the 1993 National Secondary Schools Press Conference held in Rizal High School in Pasig, for example, a lot of the photojournalism contest participants approached me, asking for help in loading and unloading their film, advice on what shutter speed to use, etc. These are the basics, the fundamentals that school paper advisers should have taught their staffers.

If you’re a school paper adviser, staffer, or a student taking up a course with a curriculum that requires photography like Mass Communications, Fine Arts, Interior Design, etc, or you’re interested in photography as a hobby, this series of postings is definitely for you. It’s my hope you’d be inspired to learn more on your own about photography.

I’ve, however. used the term “photojournalism” in a rather loose but restricted way in this series. Loose because photojournalism is the application of photography to a class of events that people classify as “news.” Most of the topics we will discuss, however, are the basics, the foundations of photography. It’s restricted in the sense that I have limited the term to “campus news photography.”

Photography is a hard taskmaster

Like any other art, skill, or talent, however, photography is a hard taskmaster. If I may borrow the words of the late writer Maria Luna Lopez, photography, like journalism, is a jealous and demanding mistress. To learn photography, you should invest time and effort in it.

One other specific area I wish I could really contribute is in disabusing the minds of some advisers and editors who believe that articles are always better than photographs. These advisers and editors (who are in the very small minority, thankfully) love to fill their publications with columns upon columns of text, with almost no pictures at all. As a result, their publications have a lot of “gray pages.” The modern trend in publications worldwide is the use of bigger and bolder graphics (pictures, drawings, headlines, etc.), without sacrificing of course, substance and depth in the articles. This trend is influenced by the impact of television, computers, and other forms of electronic communication on our everyday lives.

Marshall Macluhan, world-famous author of the book “The Medium is the Message” once said that electronic media has brought about a new form of illiteracy. A lot of people today are visually literate and sophisticated but have lost the ability, the skill, or the patience to read full-length articles or books.

I am not advocating of course, this “New Illiteracy” as Macluhan described it. What I wish to emphasize is a philosophy in journalism known as “editing by design.”
Simply put, this philosophy stresses that contents and design must always go hand in hand. Advisers and editors must work together with photographers, art directors, and layout artists. Any publication, whether a school paper or a yearbook, must not only “read well” but also look good.

The power of photography

World literature tells us the tragic story of Faust who vowed to bargain away his soul if he could find one perfect moment of happiness. He would eternally forfeit his soul if upon finding that one perfect moment of happiness, he would say the words, “Stay, you are so beautiful.” He couldn’t find that happiness in his relationships, in society, in achievements, but he did find it in a small village by the sea, with the sun setting down and mothers calling upon their small children to come back to their homes. In the simple joys of these village folks, Faust found his one perfect moment of happiness. At last, he said the words, “Stay, you are so beautiful!” and his soul was eternally forfeited.

RHS girl scouts Class 96; fill the frame; photo by Atty. GalacioPhotography has the power to capture not only our perfect moments of love and happiness but also searing images of cruelty and poverty. It has the power to preserve in a rectangular frame the beauty of a thousand sunsets, the joys of parents seeing their child just learning how to walk on its own, and the sublime happiness of students graduating after years of hard work and sacrifice.

Unlike Faust, however, we do not have to bargain away our souls in order to capture our perfect moments of happiness. We only have to pick up our cameras, look at the world through the view-finder, and, as life passes before our lenses, capture these perfect moments of happiness on film, as we say in our hearts and minds, “Stay, you are so beautiful!”

Nat Geo videos on power of photography to witness, to reveal, to relate, to prove, and to celebrate











Update as of September 18, 2023:

If you’re a high school or grade school student in the Philippines who’s joining the photojournalism contest in the division, regional, or national press conference, I’m offering two free resources to you :

A. 900-plus interactive exercises on English grammar, vocabulary, reading comprehension, verbal analogy, etc (with around 200 megabytes total file size). The exercises have time limit and automatic scoring, with an average of 10 items per exercise.

Examples of these interactive exercises are: Common English grammar errors: Exercise 01 (nouns - confusions of number); Phrasal Verbs: Expressions with Go; English Placement Test (45 items).

B. 200-plus resources (JPG, PDF, MP4, etc.) on photography and photojournalism, with 600-plus megabytes total file size. For some examples of these resources, surf to the “Free photography e-books, cheat sheets” page.

For the download links and more information about how to use the interactive exercises, please surf to my “Better English resources and exercises” blog. Please inform your journalism teacher/schoolpaper adviser or your parents about these resources before downloading them.

If you have any question about downloading or using these free resources, please email me (after informing your journalism teacher/schoolpaper adviser or your parents). I’ll be able to reply to you within two to three days; if you don’t see my reply in your Inbox, check your Spam folder. Or, you can text me.

Also, if you win in the photojournalism contest at whatever level (district, division, regional, or national), you can send me your prizewinning pictures, and I will feature them in a blog post.

Atty. Gerry T. Galacio
gtgalacio@yahoo.com
0927-798-3138


Saturday, May 26, 2007

Love Potion No. 9

For the past several years, I have been counseling women who are involved in abusive relationships or who want to escape from their marriage. Probably the most bizarre story I have ever heard is from a counselee (a schoolteacher) who married a man she met and talked to just once prior to their quickie marriage. She said that the man’s mother had been telling her for some time about the good qualities of the guy, and that time before she met him, the mother asked her to eat some kind of food that made her feel somewhat dizzy. For reasons she couldn’t understand then, she said she agreed to marry the guy. This woman, who’s now seeking to annul her marriage, told me that she probably was fed with some kind of gayuma (or love potion, in the English language) by the mother.

Well, well, well, love potions… If you grew up in the 1960’s like I did, you’re probably familiar with the hit song “Love Potion No. 9” by the doo-wop group known as The Clovers. For the younger ones among you, you might remember that “Love Potion No. 9” was title of a movie starring Sandra Bullock and Tate Donovan. Love potions are part of Filipino folklore; if you want someone to fall in love with you, you just have to go to the “arbolaryo” (the village herb doctor, in English) who will concoct a potent brew for you. You then slip the “gayuma” in your desired one’s food or drink, and instantly, that man or woman will fall instantly in love with you. If you’re in the Metro Manila area, you simply have to go around the vicinity of the Quiapo church, and look around the various stalls offering love potions, amulets, herbs of various kinds and for various purposes …

Do love potions really work? Do they really exist in this day and age of the Internet, websites, 3G cellphones and e-mail? Well, believe it or not, but serious scientists have done some quite extensive studies in neurochemistry and have come up with the conclusion that “love” really is a matter of chemicals. Not the “gayuma” kind of chemicals but chemicals that already are part of the complex human body. Hmmm, very interesting …


The cuddle chemicals

Dannah Gresh in one of her books (either “Pursuing the Pearl” or “And the Bride Wore White”) says that “adrenaline” is the fuel of romantic love. Well, sorry, Dannah, but your research is wrong! Scientists working in the field of neurochemistry say that the chemicals responsible for love are, among others, dopamine, vasopressin and oxytocin, or the so-called “cuddle chemicals.” (The 1955 Nobel Prize in Chemistry went to Vincent du Vigneaud who discovered, isolated and synthesized oxytocin and vasopressin.)

Secular writer Eve Salinger says that, at the beginning stages, when a man and woman start getting attracted to each other, the human brain produces increasing levels of “dopamine” and “norepinephrine” which create feelings of exhilaration and lovesickness. Salinger says that as the romantic relationship loses its initial exhilarating buzz, “dopamine” and “norepinephrine” are replaced by “vasopressin” and “oxytocin” which promote bonding or a warm, fuzzy feeling between the man and the woman.

“Endorphin” (another cuddle chemical) is thought to be the main chemical responsible for long-term relationships, and its levels increase when a person responds to loving touch, pleasing visual stimuli, positive thoughts and physical exercise.

Love is in the brain, not the heart?


The National Geographic magazine (February 2004 issue), in its banner story “Love: The Chemical Reaction”, likewise speaks of the brain chemical “dopamine” as producing intense energy, exhilaration, focused attention and motivation. Written by Lauren Slater, the article says, “Love and obsessive-compulsive disorder could have a similar chemical profile. Translation: Love and mental illness may be difficult to tell apart.” Yikes!

Wikipedia, in its articles about the “cuddle chemicals” (dopamine, vasopressin, oxytocin, endorphin, etc), gives us some very interesting information:


Dopamine (C8H11NO2) is a chemical naturally produced in the body. In the brain, dopamine functions as a neurotransmitter, activating dopamine receptors. Dopamine is also a neurohormone released by the hypothalamus. Its main function as a hormone is to inhibit the release of prolactin from the anterior lobe of the pituitary.

Dopamine can be supplied as a medication that acts on the sympathetic nervous system, producing effects such as increased heart rate and blood pressure. However, since dopamine cannot cross the blood-brain barrier, dopamine given as a drug does not directly affect the central nervous system. To increase the amount of dopamine in the brains of patients with diseases such as Parkinson's disease and Dopa-Responsive Dystonia, a synthetic precursor to dopamine such as L-DOPA can be given, since this will cross the blood-brain barrier.

Dopamine is commonly associated with the pleasure system of the brain, providing feelings of enjoyment and reinforcement to motivate a person proactively to perform certain activities. Dopamine is released (particularly in areas such as the nucleus accumbens and striatum) by naturally rewarding experiences such as food, sex, use of certain drugs and neutral stimuli that become associated with them.

Vasopressin is a peptide hormone liberated from a preprohormone precursor that is synthesized in the hypothalamus as it is transported to the posterior pituitary. Most of it is stored in the posterior part of the pituitary gland to be released into the blood stream; some of it is also released directly into the brain. It is responsible for creating intense loving memories, for clarity of thought and alertness during passionate situations.

In recent years there has been particular interest in the role of vasopressin in social behavior. It is thought that vasopressin, released into the brain during sexual activity, initiates and sustains patterns of activity that support the pair-bond between the sexual partners.

Oxytocin (C43H66N12O12S2 and Greek for “quick birth”) is a mammalian hormone that also acts as a neurotransmitter in the brain. In women, it is released mainly after distension of the cervix and vagina during labor, and after stimulation of the nipples, facilitating birth and breastfeeding, respectively. Oxytocin is released during orgasm in both sexes. In the brain, oxytocin is involved in social recognition and bonding, and might be involved in the formation of trust between people.

The different actions of oxytocin within the brain are sexual arousal, bonding, maternal behavior, various ant-stress functions, and increasing trust and reducing fear.
A very interesting study, referred to extensively by Slater’s National Geographic article, is that of the 2004 book “Why We Love - the Nature and Chemistry of Romantic Love” by Helen Fisher. In her studies which made extensive use of MRI (magnetic resonance imaging), Fisher discovered that when a person looks at a picture of person he or she loves, the parts of the brain associated with rewards and pleasure and known as the “ventral segmental area” and the “caudate nucleus” almost literally light up with activity.

These chemicals are reactive, meaning they don’t just kick into our systems for no reason at all and hold us hostage to their effects. There’s always first a stimulus - food, a breathtaking scenery, an attractive guy (okay, okay, you can use me as an example!) – that sets these chemicals into action. In one study for example, when women in good marriages were asked to think about their husbands, the oxytocin levels in their blood increased. The stimulus was the pleasing thoughts about their husbands, and the effect was increased oxytocin levels.


The cuddle chemicals and your relationships

What are the practical applications for you in knowing all these things about the cuddle chemicals? Well, when you meet someone attractive and interesting (okay, okay, you can use me for an example!), the sparks will start flying but that’s only because of dopamine kicking into your system. Don’t jump to the conclusion that you’re truly falling in love. Give yourself time (lots of it!), and in a more stable emotional climate, you can better evaluate what your feelings are for that person. As Dr. James Dobson said in his book “Love Must Be Tough” (specifically the chapter on “Loving Toughness for Singles”), “Don’t let the relationship move too fast in its infancy. The phrase ‘too hot not to cool down’ has validity. Take it one step at a time.”

The end of the romance

The exhilarating, romance-filled days will not last. That’s because, as researchers in neurochemistry say, the dopamine-fueled hyperactivity can damage the brain. Remember what Slater in her National Geographic article said about love and mental illness being difficult to tell apart? Yikes!

Drs. Les and Leslie Parrot in their book “Relationships” point out that the lifetime of most romantic relationships is only about two years, with a break-up occurring on the third year. Why? Well, they say that a man and a woman in the first year of their relationship are blind to the faults and defects of each other. Reality only sets in during the second year of the relationship, and the couple begins to notice the negatives in their partner’s attitudes, character and personality.


Well, well, well, from the arbolaryo’s love potions to the scientists’ cuddle chemicals … What really is love?

World-renowned marriage and family counselor Dr. Ed Wheat in his classic book “Love Life For Every Married Couple” states the following four foundational principles about what love really is all about:

[1] I can learn what love is from the Word of God. It is rational, not irrational. I can understand love and grow in the understanding of it throughout my lifetime.

[2] Love is not easy or simple: it is an art that I must want to learn and pour my life into. I can learn how to love.

[3] Love is an active power that I control by my own will. I am not the helpless slave of love. I can choose to love.

[4] Love is the power that will produce love as I learn to give it rather than strain to attract it.
In the said book, Dr. Wheat also defines and discusses the different Greek words for “love” used in the Bible. These are:


[1] Epithumia – though not really a word for love, it denotes strong physical desire between a husband and wife;

[2] Eros - romantic, passionate, and sentimental love; infatuation among younger people; changeable and fickle;

[3] Storge - natural affection and a sense of belonging to each other, the kind of love shared by parents and children or brothers and sisters who see each other as a an emotional refuge in the storms of life;

[4] Phileo – a love between friends, comrades, brothers in arms, characterized by sharing, closeness and companionship; and

[5] Agape - the totally unselfish love that has the capacity to give and keep on giving without expecting in return.
For those people struggling in a difficult marriage, the agape kind of love is what can keep the marriage together even when the other spouse is resisting or unwilling to change, or even wanting to leave the marriage altogether through divorce or separation. If you want to know more about Dr. Wheat’s ideas and suggestions for a fulfilling love relationship, please read my previous articles “How to save your marriage alone: Priceless counsel from a bargain sale book” and “Acronyms for a great relationship: Kailangang i-memorize yan!” His book is also available in National Bookstore and in Christian bookstores (OMF Lit, PCBS, back to the Bible, Vine and the Branches).

To know more of what real love is, we’ve got to turn to the Bible’s Love Chapter – I Corinthians chapter 13. Below is a copy of that famous love chapter with the 1611 King James Version word “charity” replaced with “love”. Here we go!


1. Though I speak with the tongues of men and of angels, and have not love, I am become as sounding brass, or a tinkling cymbal.
2. And though I have the gift of prophecy, and understand all mysteries, and all knowledge; and though I have all faith, so that I could remove mountains, and have not love, I am nothing.
3. And though I bestow all my goods to feed the poor, and though I give my body to be burned, and have not love, it profiteth me nothing.
4. Love suffereth long, and is kind; love envieth not; love vaunteth not itself, is not puffed up,
5. Doth not behave itself unseemly, seeketh not her own, is not easily provoked, thinketh no evil;
6. Rejoiceth not in iniquity, but rejoiceth in the truth;
7. Beareth all things, believeth all things, hopeth all things, endureth all things. 8. Love never faileth: but whether there be prophecies, they shall fail; whether there be tongues, they shall cease; whether there be knowledge, it shall vanish away.
9. For we know in part, and we prophesy in part.
10. But when that which is perfect is come, then that which is in part shall be done away.
11. When I was a child, I spake as a child, I understood as a child, I thought as a child: but when I became a man, I put away childish things.
12. For now we see through a glass, darkly; but then face to face: now I know in part; but then shall I know even as also I am known.
13. And now abideth faith, hope, love, these three; but the greatest of these is love.
Well, well, well, no mention here whatsoever of the cuddle chemicals, of dopamine, vasopressin and oxytocin, right? Next week will be June already and you will be meeting new classmates and friends, and perhaps, new prospects for a romantic relationship. But if you want to know about real love, the agape kind that transcends dreary circumstances, human relationships that are innately transient (for who lives forever?), then click here.

Saturday, May 05, 2007

Charlie Brown, Soren Kierkaagard, Elizabeth Kubler-Ross, Jim Elliot, Peter Marshall and zoe ...

Sometime in the middle 1970’s, I came across the books entitled, if I remember correctly, “The Gospel According to Peanuts” and “More Gospel According To Peanuts.” I don’t remember now who the author was, but the book’s thesis was that the Charles Schultz’s cartoon strip “Peanuts” was essentially Christian in worldview. Wow, Charlie Brown, Lucy, Snoopy, Linus, etc as theologians! I had a great time reading those books, first because I identified a lot with Charlie Brown, and second I got introduced to the thoughts of theologians and philosophers like Karl Barth and Soren Kierkaagard which the book often referred to. (I remember reading about Kierkaagard’s views at that same time from Francis Schaeffer’s book “The God Who Is There.”)

I don’t have those books anymore with me. Best that I could remember, I lent the books to a college friend named Al (he eventually went to and graduated from Raffles University in Singapore and has been working there as a journalist since the 1980’s). I don’t remember him ever returning those books. Hmm, maybe I’d better e-mail him about returning those books …

Anyway, one particular Peanuts cartoon strip from those books showed Charlie Brown walking sadly on the windblown baseball grounds as the school year ended. Charlie Brown was thinking, “I hate it when schooldays are over. There’s a dreariness in the air that depresses me.” That was when Lucy (as usual) gets into the scene and jolts Charlie Brown back into reality.

In the 1990’s, when I was editing the yearbooks of Rizal High School, I wrote a short piece based on that particular Peanuts cartoon strip, beginning it with Charlie Brown’s thoughts. I used the piece in special sections of the yearbooks, and it captured for a lot of our students their mixed emotions as they approached graduation day. The piece goes like this:



I hate it when schooldays are over. There’s a dreariness in the air that depresses me. Even the rooms that once were filled with laughter are now empty and bare, the fine dust gathering on the wooden chairs, the windows shutting out the light from the dying sun.

Outside the once green grass now turns to deep brown in the parched ground, the trees bare of any leaves, their twisted black branches reaching upwards toward the sky in vain supplication for a little rain. The wind blows and creates swirling clouds of dust that sweep the school grounds and the empty hallways that once echoed the sounds of hurrying feet and young, excited voices.

School days are over, summer is here.

We’ve said our final goodbyes to our dear friends a thousand times, not really wanting each goodbye to be the last and final sad farewell. We cling to our friends, we hold hands tightly as we walk around the school one final time; we visit the rooms that were once our safe and secure refuge from the harshness of life.

We go through the paces of graduation practices, and laugh at the silly mistakes we make. But deep inside us, we feel a cold hand clutching our hearts, knowing that each day brings us closer to the moment when separation from our dear friends becomes inevitable, a moment steeped in profound sadness and absolute finality.

We close our eyes and hope that time can stand still; we will hold this day like a precious diamond in our hands, hold it up and reflect upon its exquisite beauty. If only time can stand still, we will forever be happy, together …

ALL ETERNITY FROZEN IN A SINGLE MOMENT OF YOUTH.
Elizabeth Kubler-Ross became famous with her study on death and dying, with the stages that a person who knows he or she is terminally ill (or undergoing deep personal sorrow) oftentimes goes through – anger, denial, bargaining and acceptance. Kubler-Ross discovered that a dying person oftentimes focuses not on his or her academic achievements, career highlights, professional pinnacles, but on snatches of childhood memories, stories of friendships from long ago, and on events that may have seemed insignificant at the time but which impending death and reflection have now given a new perspective. A dying person oftentimes thinks about places that hold special memories (the house in the province, the old high school), childhood friends, falling in love for the first time …

(Talking about love, I first fell in love when I was a Grade 4 student. I can still remember her long black hair, her languid eyes, her beautiful name ... Elaine Rose. Or was it simply Rose? Or only Elaine? Or was Rose my Grade 6 classmate, Elaine my Grade 5 seatmate? Sadly, I don’t remember now ... Ah, young love!)

“All eternity frozen in a single moment of youth …”

Theologians tell us that “zoe” is the Greek word for “eternal life” or “eternity.” One pastor, teaching on eternal life, was innocently asked by a grade school student, “Pastor, do you mean to say that I will forever be a Grade 5 student?” The pastor then explained that “zoe” does not refer only to an endless period of time but also to the distinct quality of life for that endless period of time.

When I was a first year student in high school, I had a classmate named Felino who was a math genius. One time, as we were on the top level of the grandstand, gazing at the Marikina River flowing lazily behind the school, Felino said that when his time to die came, he wanted to be cremated and his ashes scattered all over the river. That he said, was his idea of eternal life.

I think it was martyred missionary Jim Elliot who said, “When it’s your time to die, make sure that all you have to do is die.” What he says, I think, is not to leave any loose ends in your life - no words of love, affirmation or encouragement left unsaid; no hurts and heartaches inflicted by other people left unforgiven; none of your own sins and offenses against other people left unconfessed …

Famous American preacher Peter Marshall (former chaplain of the US Senate) once said, "Death isn't a wall, it's a door." The Apostle Paul clarifies in I Corinthians 15:51-58 that death comes to us all and then eternity begins:

Behold, I shew you a mystery; We shall not all sleep, but we shall all be changed,
In a moment, in the twinkling of an eye, at the last trump: for the trumpet shall sound, and the dead shall be raised incorruptible, and we shall be changed.

For this corruptible must put on incorruption, and this mortal must put on immortality.

So when this corruptible shall have put on incorruption, and this mortal shall have put on immortality, then shall be brought to pass the saying that is written, Death is swallowed up in victory.

O death, where is thy sting?

O grave, where is thy victory?

The sting of death is sin; and the strength of sin is the law.

But thanks be to God, which giveth us the victory through our Lord Jesus Christ.

Therefore, my beloved brethren, be ye stedfast, unmoveable, always abounding in the work of the Lord, forasmuch as ye know that your labour is not in vain in the Lord.