I have written in the past about my love of fractals and always welcome the chance to illustrate my latest find. I ran into this YouTube video that is simply amazing and could not resist showing it. The complexity of such simplicity is amazing. Keep in mind as you watch the figures flow that each movement is a mathematical formula that is ever shifting.
I stumbled upon it while looking for something else (isn't that always the way) and was taken by the work involved . I think you will be too.
Wednesday, August 21, 2013
Tuesday, August 20, 2013
The Mayor of Hemming Park
It's easy to not see people who are homeless because to see them reinforces our own worst fears regarding health, safety, and the sometimes fragile nature of our own lives. Despite our desire to avoid, we encounter them in cities large and small and sometimes wonder what caused them to fall off life's highway and end up homeless. The reasons are numerous from drugs, mental health issues, or financial set backs; but once there, it is ever so hard to climb back out of the hole that homelessness becomes.
Every city has an area where the homeless congregate and for my town it is Hemming Plaza. It is a park in the heart of the city which rests in front of all places City Hall. The park itself harkens back to a time when downtown was bustling but has fallen on hard times because for the most part it is now a place for the homeless to watch the day flow by. My photography group decided to do a give back project and hand out personal hygiene products to people in the park while doing street scene shots in the area. An interesting way to watch the day flow by for photographers.
I encountered Roy, who I call the Mayor of Hemming Plaza, because he was personable, and seemed to go out of his way to help the other men who frequent the park. I didn't ask
for a story of how he ended up homeless and he didn't feel the need to
provide one. It is what it is as the saying goes, and we bonded over
stories of the different cities he had drifted through which made for
good conversation.
He went into the grim details of the dance involved in living on the
street and bouncing from shelter to shelter while working odd jobs to
maintain a small day to day existence. Gaining a foothold was a
difficult task even sometimes when he had money in his pocket. He didn't
mention the mental processes he went through to one day decide no
matter the challenges he was determined to get off the street, but one
day it simply came to him.
He mentioned he was a military vet and used that as an opening for
temporary shelter and later began to build on the sense of stability
that provided. He ultimately was able to get a little place with a bed, a
few
pieces of furniture, a TV, and his prized possession a refrigerator.
Simple things by normal standards but for him the act of being able to
take a shower when he felt like it, watch a TV show, or walk over to get
a snack from his "box" without having to depend on anyone else, were
major accomplishments.
He still does odd jobs to support himself and enjoys his little creature
comforts, but in between the lines I could hear that the pull of the
street is still strong despite it's struggles. The way he describes it
you just know that Roy fights an ongoing battle to stay off the street.
Returning from time to time to Hemming Plaza I guess is his way of
scratching that itch.
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