Through Departure's Eyes
It dawned on me as I walked home to the Lewisham flat this evening that I'll only do this a handful of times again - maybe half a dozen times. In just over a fortnight, the sale of the flat will compete, and my links with Lewisham will be severed after 16 years - the longest time I've lived in a single place.
And, sometimes, knowing that your time in a place is coming to an end makes you start to see it with new eyes, even if you really feel that you are completely done with the area.
And so, tonight, for the first time in an age, I stopped and took some photos of Lewisham again. I'd tried to put aside my ennui for the area and see it with the eyes of enthusiasm I once had. And I began, just a little, to see what it offers.
Random Family Photo: Hill Snow
A random photo from my scanning of old family negatives. This is Dollar, my childhood neighbourhood, in the midst of winter snow. This was taken sometime in the late 1980s - probably 87 or 88, I'd guess, and was the work of my Mum.
As autumn starts to get a grip on 2011, this picture makes me nostalgic for my childhood in Scotland…
Sleepy Like Minds
I've just noticed that I appear in one of the rotating pics on the Like Minds homepage. That's me, in the window, apparently resting on my hands.
I'm not sure if I look like I'm:
- Asleep
- In despair
- In a prayer meeting
- Hiding from the camera
Men being jerks about coffee
via www.youtube.com
When will those crazy gals ever get anything right?
via www.cutesexyfunnyawful.com
Luckily this problem has been solved in the 21st century.
I make my own damn coffee. ;-)
Evening light over the Adur
I spent last Friday at dConstruct, a conference held just down the coast in Brifghton. As I walked home from Shoreham station, the mist was just beginning to descend over the Adur, as the evening light turned orange. The quality of light that resulted was just breathtaking. Luckily, I had my DSLR with me, from my conference liveblogging, and I grabbed a few images before the light passed:
Such a lovely part of the world to come home to.