Chicago circa 1940's |
I'd like to think so. It gives me peace to think so.
I don't think I could manage this life if I lived it believing there was nothing more after this world...that this was all there is...that there was nothing divine about our humanness...
Somehow this has me thinking about my father and how I hear his voice speak to me often since I learned of his death. In the small and quiet places when I can talk to him out loud, he answers me. Is he really speaking to me, or is it just a way to cope with his loss? to cope with the profound loss of the hope for reparation that came with his passing from me? Does it really matter?
My thought is, that as long as love and gratitude and wonder take the place of hate and despair and hopelessness, then the world is better....humanity is better....and healing takes place. And that is what works. It is those things that make a difference. It has nothing to do with religious rites or "moralists" or the people out there trying so adamantly to prove that no God exists. I think it is about loving the questions and regarding the mystery with wonder.
This little girl, the one in this photograph, does she know how she's changed the world? By posing for a photograph on a hot July day so long ago. Simply standing there in her boots and in her innocence...she has changed the whole world. And she knows it because I tell her, and she hears me...and because I am here to tell her story with love and gratitude and wonder.
Do you have a favorite photograph? If so, can you share a bit about it with us? It is very easy to comment. No need for an account. Just use the "anonymous" feature.
Love and Light,
Jennifer
This is such a beautiful entry, Jennifer. It's almost made me cry reading it. I have a huge collection of old photos just like this one...I have no clue who the people are, but over the years they have become family to me. Each image captures a small part of a person, and that part lives on through the picture. It's amazing to me that one small thing like a photograph, can have such an impact on our lives. I hope to one day meet you in person, and share all the wonderful things we have in common. You have a wonderful heart and beautiful soul and are an inspiration to many people including me :-).
ReplyDelete-Jenny
She's beautiful. I love her spirit.
ReplyDeleteMy mom died about ten years ago and I have had dreams where she talks to me. My mom was schizophrenic and far from able to be a normal mom sometimes, but she loved my sister and I and she really, really tried.
My favorite picture isn't mine actually. A friend of my sister's posted it to facebook and shows my mom and sister working on a Girl Scout project. My mom was REALLY self conscious about her appearance and I only have 2 photos of her, she would always hide when she saw a camera come out. But this one she isn't paying attention, so she was caught. :)