weekly photo challenge: illusions

Earlier this week, while watching the forever changing clouds that journey pass my home, I remembered the fascination, during an undergraduate psych class,  I had with the Rorschach Test.  This projective psychological test, commonly known as the ink block test, was developed in 1921.   In 1943 the US military implemented the Harrow-Erickon Multiple Choice Rorschach Test for the large scale screening of U.S. military personnel.  While the first outcomes reported impressive predictive power, later work showed that the test had very limited value.

What do you see in this image of clouds?

cloudsbirdsweb8218

Image submitted in response to Jenn’s,  Traveling at Wits End, challenge to “get out of the box” and create an image that looks like something else or looks different than it really is.

clouds II

clouds4aweb

“Before the cloud appeared in the sky she was not nothing. She was the water in the ocean. She was the heat generated by the sun. She was the water vapor rising up to the sky. And when we can no longer see the cloud in the sky, she hasn’t died; she has just transformed into rain or snow. The notion of death is also created by our mind. It is impossible for something to become nothing. The cloud hasn’t died; it is manifesting in its new form as rain, as hail, as snow, as the river, and as the cup of tea in my two hands. So the true nature of the cloud is no-birth and no-death.

clouds2aweb

“… we can start to see the countless umbilical cords that link us to life all around us. There is an umbilical cord that exists between us and the river. The water we drink every day flows down from mountain springs and streams, right into our kitchen. So the river is also a mother and there is an invisible umbilical cord between us. If we cannot see it yet, it’s because we haven’t looked deeply enough. There is another umbilical cord between us and the clouds, between us and the forests, and another between us and the sun. The sun is like a parent to us. Without our link to the sun we could not live, and neither could anything else. We are nourished and sustained by countless parents. The river, the wild animals, the plants, the soil and all its minerals are our mothers and fathers, and are mothers and fathers to all phenomena on planet Earth. That is why in the sutras it is said that living beings have been our parents through countless lifetimes.

clouds1bweb

“There are umbilical cords linking us to all that is in the universe and in the entire cosmos. Can you see the link between you and me? If you are not there, I am not here; that is certain. If you do not yet see it, look more deeply and I am sure you will see”

Excerpt: Thich Nhát Hanh, The Other Shore 

clouds

“I have found that the use of clouds in my photographs has made people less aware of clouds as clouds in the pictures than when I have portrayed trees or houses or wood or any other objects.

clouds4web

 

“In looking at my photographs of clouds, people seem freer to think about the relationships in the pictures than about the subject-matter for its own sake.

clouds2web

“My photographs are a picture of chaos in the world, and of my relationship to that chaos. My prints show the world’s constant upsetting of man’s equilibrium, and his eternal battle to reestablish it.”*

clouds5web

*Cited: Alfred Stieglitz, Master of Photographs: Aperture.

weekly photo challenge: pure

Jen’s photo challenge for this week is to “share a photo of something pure…Pure can convey wholesomeness, something undiluted, or simplicity.”

The fireflies light

How easily it goes on

How easily it goes out again

~Chine-Jo

wpcpure

Sunset 

 

black and white sunday: timeless

The depth of the hearts

Of humankind cannot be known.

But in my birthplace

The plum blossoms smell the same

As in the years gone by.

~Ki no Tsurayuki*

timelessb&w

image submitted in response to Lost in Translation’s b&w challenge: timeless

*cited:

http://www.wakapoetry.net

weekly photo challenge: earth

Have celestial maidens

descended to earth?

blossom clouds.

~Issa*

DSC_2882wpcearth

Laramie Mountain Range

The earth mound’s

part of it indeed…

a fine spring day

~Issa*

DSC_3848Nonewpcearth

Cache la Poudre River

submitted in response to Jen’s photo challenge: Earth

*cited:

haiku guy.com