Sorting Through Old Photos–what is the purpose of photos?

I’ve been spending a significant amount of time recently sorting through my parents’ photos. Most people who have accumulated photos–by which I mean actual printed photos, especially those taken with film–can sympathize with the whole “what do I do with all these, and how long can I put off dealing with it?” In my case, I have parents who took a lot of travel photos and a grandfather who was a photographer. As I try to figure out what to keep, what to scan then toss, and what can be tossed without scanning, I necessarily find myself wondering about the purpose of photos.

But first, another puzzle. When I say these are my parents‘ photos, this is a bit misleading. On the one hand, among the photos of my childhood and their later travels (and grandparenthood) are scattered photos from even earlier–photos of great-grandparents, other relatives of earlier generations, and unidentified people of long ago. Not my parents‘ photos, but someone else’s. Someone earlier. And on the other hand, there are the photos that I sent them–my photos–of myself and my family. So whose photos are these, really?

Back to the question of purpose. My father took a lot of photos during his travels, many of them from before he even met my mother. Some have notes on the back–“In this establishment I spent my first night in India,” Indonesian boy doing filigree work on a ring, Bali,” “Street traffic in Jaipur.” They are in one sense interesting–scenes of people in different lands, different cultures, with different landscapes. In another sense, they are of no interest. Who are these people to me? Why would I need random (to me) scenes of long ago?

It’s hard to let go of something that he took such care to annotate, and in fact, I scanned a lot of the ones with notes. But then I tossed them. There are so many other photos to look at with more meaning, there’s just no reason to dilute the collection with all this scenery.

Looking at the rest, what do I want the photos for? Those pictures of long-dead relations, why do I want to keep them? Partly I suppose it is scarcity–there aren’t all that many photos. Partly I suppose it is the novelty of their fashions, and partly the thought “Wow–that’s my grandfather as a baby! That’s my great-grandmother!” I’m not sure why that’s exciting, but I guess that’s how we are. We want faces to go with the names in the genealogy or, if we’re lucky, the stories we’ve been told.

The photos from my lifetime, I want for the memories. I want to remember the people. My second cousins with us in the motorboat. My grandmere and grandpere at the table, smiling at us over a birthday cake. The kids in my sixth grade class. My guinea pigs.

I want to remember the events, too. Swimming in that guy’s pool in Bamako–I can’t remember his name, but I remember that his cook thought lemonade was too strong for children. Playing Dungeon in the living room and joking about green slime jello and roasted rat. Drawing pictures during one of many long car rides. Attending one of my brother’s endless soccer games (during which I also drew pictures).

Also–and this isn’t something I anticipated–I want to remember some of the details about the places I’ve lived. How incredibly orange that one kitchen was, and the sky-blue ironwork grilles over the windows at that same house. The rubber tree in the back yard of the other place. The asterisk-like stars on the kitchen table at my grandparents’ house, and the Marimekko-style throw pillows at my other grandparents’ house. Some of these are details I would have said I’d forgotten–yet when I saw the photo, I remembered.

But this also means that many of the photos I save, so I can remember the people, the events, the little details of my past, will be meaningless to my daughter when I am gone. .What photos do I save for her, and how can I make them mean something?

I can take my own situation as a test. As I go through the photos, I show batches of them to my mom. Sometimes she can tell me who it is and even the address–apparently those photos stir her memory. Other times, it’s a mystery. For the ones she remembers fondly, what (if anything) would make them meaningful to me? The answer is a clue to what I should do for my daughter.

For starters, I could label some of the most important people, as (some of) my ancestors did for me (thank you, ancestors!) I could pull out or otherwise distinguish the photos that might be of interest to her later on, from those that are really only of interest to me. (Hmm, a lousy photo of mom in a swimming pool somewhere–wonder why she kept this?) I could write down the stories that go with them, though admittedly most of these are pretty thin and barely count as stories. Still, when it’s family, even a thin story is appreciated.

So that’s what I need to do as I go through these photos, or more likely, after I’ve gone through them. I need to pull the important ones, label them, and write their stories. After that, maybe I can tackle my own piles of old photos, languishing in the closet…

No, wait. I forgot about the slides. All those many, many slides….Aieee…!

Till next post.

Not the table with the asterisks
One of my sweet piggies
Mr. X’s pool in Bamako
Playing Dungeon for the umpteenth time
One of those many soccer games
So much orange!

Emergency Preparedness Plan

Daily writing prompt
Create an emergency preparedness plan.

I rarely pay attention to the WordPress prompt, even when I check my dashboard. But emergency preparedness is something I am interested in, even though I have not done a good job of it so far.

Hurricane season is here, so I make sure we have some minimum preparation. Gallon jugs of water, batteries for the nice lamps a friend gave us, and we have a hand-crank radio in case I don’t have enough batteries for the bright yellow radio I’ve had for years and never use.

Some emergencies require evacuation. Tanker trunks carrying chemicals or fuel can spill after crashes. And we’re reminded all too often of the dangers of wildfires, of course. I ought to have planned some routes out of town, preferably ones less likely to get jammed with traffic if everyone leaves at once. I ought to have a go-bag as well, but I’m afraid I don’t. I do try to keep my gas tank at least half-full these days–the last thing you want in an emergency evacuation is to have to stop for gas (especially when everyone else is doing the same.)

Some emergencies occur on the road. I realize that paper towels and a trash bag are not really aimed at emergencies, but they’re good to have on hand. I ought to have a flashlight and batteries (stored separately–otherwise they tend to leak after a while,) but I’m not sure I do. I do have a basic first aid kit and a kit of emergency car supplies that I probably need to check over to see if it contains anything that expires.

The pandemic was an emergency for which most people were not well prepared, including me. I don’t normally have hand sanitizer on hand, let alone masks. Once it was clear that we really were in an emergency, I did go through our supplies: tylenol, cleaners with bleach, thermometers that still work, rags in case we needed to wipe down surfaces frequently, bottles of ginger ale and other things one likes when sick, and so forth. We were lucky and didn’t end up needing them, so I added canned goods and am calling it “the hurricane box.”

Of course, you have to keep rotating out the supplies to keep them fresh. I hope the US government has learned that lesson.

Regarding those jugs of water–you can’t assume you’ll have warning that you might need them. Someone wrote in the paper once that there was no reason to keep water on hand except if there was a hurricane or such threatening. Wrong. You can’t predict when your water supplier will have a fluoridation issue that requires them to drain their entire tank, on the same day that a major pipe that connects them to their back-up supply springs a leak and has to be closed down. Sometimes you just get a perfect storm of water issues.

We received messages that started by warning us not to drink the water and be conservative with other uses, and ended by telling us NOT TO USE THE WATER FOR ANYTHING as it was very low and could no longer be assumed safe.

The local stores sold out of water jugs and people drove to nearby towns to get more (and to enjoy their free-flowing taps.) But we didn’t have to rush, because we did have some jugs of water already. The water supplier worked night and day to fix the leak; the tank of excessively fluoridated water finished draining and was replaced; and after just two days, we had drinkable running water again.

Summing up my existing emergency preparedness plan:

  • Keep jugs of water on hand.
  • Keep gas tank at least half full.
  • Have fresh batteries available for your flashlight and radio (and know where they are.)
  • Have some non-perishable, no-heating-required food on hand.
  • Stock some of the drinks (and foods) that you like to have when you are sick.
  • Make sure your ibuprofen or tylenol has not expired, and that you have a thermometer.

There’s a lot more that I should be doing (emergency pet supplies? actual go-bag?) but it’s a start.

Till next post.

P.S. I really enjoyed the Great Courses lecture series “When Everything Fails: Surviving Any Disaster”, which I was able to borrow from my library. It isn’t really about all disasters–no zombie apocalypse or end of the civilization–but it is about the disasters that actually happen to people every year. It gives examples, talks about preparation, and also discusses how society has (gradually) tried to build a structure for assisting with these emergencies–and what some of its limits are.

Cat Dreams–what do cats dream about?

I know my cat dreams. It isn’t just that she’s a mammal, with a brain much like mine. It’s because sometimes, as she sleeps on my lap, her paws twitch and she mumbles that chirping, chattering sound she makes to birds on the other side of the window.

So she probably dreams about birds in the garden. What else do cats dream about? I imagine she dreams about other things that happen in her life. Maybe she chases lizards, or washes herself, or eats delicious wet food.

Does she dream about things that haven’t happened? The vacuum has never left the closet of its own accord and chased her around the house, but does she have nightmares about that happening? Or does imagining things that haven’t happened, even in dreams, require some quality that cats’ brains don’t possess? Maybe she has bad dreams of going to the vet, of being poked with small pointy sticks, but none in which inflated garbage bag creatures pounce on her in the kitchen.

Maybe that’s a good thing.

What is it like when she gets woken up mid-dream, perhaps by some over-affectionate human wanting to pat her? When I wake up abruptly from a dream, sometimes it’s hard to shake the feelings I had, especially if I was angry at someone, or very upset about something that happened in the dream. And I know that it was a dream, and know the difference between dreaming and reality. How do cats know the difference between a dream and reality? Or does it not matter–does whatever they felt in the dream get immediately replaced by their awareness of their waking surroundings, so that the dream fades from thought almost instantly?

What is it like when cats dream? I can only guess.

Till next post.