As a child, I got to plant a tree. But when I sold our house, the new owners cut
it down.
I recorded my songs, but the tapes eventually unspooled themselves and
got irreversibly tangled.
I read and studied and was proud of my language
proficiency until I migrated and had to start over.
I trained horses and dogs,but they got old and died.
I photographed artfully and spent much time and moneyon film, but the medium of slides became obsolete.
I fought to establish a wetland nature preserve, and against a freeway planned to cross through it. When
I returned after 30 years, it the groundwater level had fallen, and the marsh
was dying.
I invested in friendships and love, but I or the friends moved away, and
the connections were reduced to facebook messages.
I collected books, bird nests, and art but abandoned them on another continent to people who did not
care.
I painted and sold my work, but the people who bought my paintings got old
and their heirs had different tastes.
I am working on a book when the medium of print might be reaching the end of its 400 year reign.
The tree was a birch that we brought back from a trip to the Dutch border in a pot. I watched how the huge
leaves of the young tree turned over the years into much smaller leaves of the
mature. It grew over our heads, gave us shade, a place to climb up in, where
birds would roost, and leaf-rolling weevils perform their art. It sparked feuds
with neighbors over falling catkins, seeds and leaves. It lost a limb one spring
and produced so much ‘Birkenwasser’ that we all washed gloss and health into our
hair. It gave character to our house.
In the evenings we often sang under the tree, learning songs in a foreign language because we felt that our own
folk-songs were infused with a patriotism that left a bad taste in our mouths.
There we easily threw out the good with the bad. But enthusiastically we sang
into microphones of primitive recorders, and mothers got years of enjoyment from
it. Eventually, I made the foreign language of those songs my own. I had been
very comfortable in my old language and deeply loved its writers and poets. But
discovering new lands was exciting and invigorating. Even though for a while a
new language makes any migrant feel like she is being reduced to the level of a
10 year old even in her thoughts, one eventually gets comfortable enough to
believe that no loss happened, but new levels of complexity have been
reached. Cognitive bias that makes us feel better. When I noticed that I used my
new language to train my dogs, I knew that I had become quite comfortable. Of
course, those dogs were not the beloved one that accompanied my childhood. That
I trained and took to trials that he was not bred for and still got some awards.
But I found a little bit of him in each of the others – and I loved many over
the years. Only photos remain of most of them – a dog’s life is so short that I
have begun to think of them as the continuum of ‘our dogs’. Always an avid
photographer, I got my first camera at the age of five. My father had his own
darkroom, and my parents’ best friend was an artist who worked in every medium
imaginable, including art photography. Absorbing by osmosis rather than being
taught, I early on tried to use the camera to capture and preserve memories, to
create art, and to document observations of the natural world. My first greater
investment of any kind was a state-of-the-art macro lens for my Canon A1. As
digital technology began to replace film and slides, I made the switch later
than many. I love now the instant feedback, certainly the endless availability
of digital pixels, and that I can edit and change my photos without spending
nights in a smelly darkroom. I miss the mystery of the image slowly appearing in
the developing bath. I still think about graininess versus light-sensitivity and
speed versus depth of field. Sadly, I got disenchanted with the quality and
usability of my earlier slides to the point that I just left thousands of them
behind when I sold our old house. I was under immense stress at the time and
still regret that decision. But those photos that I cannot physically see
anymore are ingrained on my brain and will forever be of superior quality and
artfulness. I returned to the ‘old country’ after my mother died and I had to
resolve her estate. It was a very sad time. I found solace returning to the
woods of my childhood and the swampy nature preserve that I had helped to
establish in the late seventies by doing the entomology part of our biodiversity
assessment. Where in the first half of the last century mining activity had
caused severe sinking of the ground and a reversal of the flow of the
groundwater, trees had drowned, and agricultural fields had been lost to
wetlands. These themselves were then considered worthy of protection because the
country retained so very few of its original bogs and swamps. When I returned
over 30 years later, the area was still protected by nature preserve signs, but
a changing climate was drying out the soil and the forest was taking back the
area. The change was fascinating to observe: While many of the insect species I
had listed earlier were gone, I found many pioneer species and a very high level
of diversity, as often the case in disturbed or changing environments. I would
have loved to observe longer or at least to come back to it later. (The
situation may have been reversed again after the floods of 2021 in NRW) A friend
from my youth had joined me for this short step back in time. Disconnected from
the past and any possible future, this encounter was blissfully sweet. Never a
person to easily bond, I have left behind most of my closest friends at several
points in my life. But I tend to keep most of them close to my heart, and
whenever we meet again, I connect as if no time had passed. Most bad memories,
though, have been erased. That cognitive bias again! Even my happy marriage is
based on reconnecting to my great love after more than 15 years and another
marriage in between. There was heartbreak in the past. But time has made that
unimportant. Whenever I was lonely or sad, I found an outlet in creativity. I
can trace back my most active times in nature photography, writing and painting
to times of broken first love, a failing marriage, homesickness and other
shake-ups. Painting especially always helps me to transcendent to a state beyond
momentary pain and stress. So the reward I get from painting is manyfold. First,
the process of painting is reward in itself. I really fight and work from the
‘ugly’ phase that any of my paintings goes through to the satisfaction of the
finished piece. Watercolor, by its somewhat ‘accidental’ character, lives of
surprising, unplanned effects. The art lies in letting them happen and enjoying
them. Then, I get to show the piece. At shows, on-line, it’s usually a good
experience, and I do not question what could just be flattery. The real test
comes when it’s up for sale. I hate sounding so commercial, but it is a great
compliment when someone is willing to pay my price and give the painting or
print a prominent place in his home. People who buy from me are also always
exceedingly graceful: they thank me – as if no money had been involved in the
exchange. So the satisfaction is great on both sides, even if I am realistic
enough to know that any change in the living arrangements of my clients can make
my painting homeless again. My art is just not high end enough to pose a
collectible value in every case (yet 😊). At the moment I am not producing much
art. That could mean that I am just too blissfully contented. But in fact, I am
pouring my creativity into the preparations for a book, my long dreamed-of
Arizona Beetles. It has become somewhat of a never-ending story because we find
more and more species to include, especially since my co-author, Art Evans, has
now bought into my concept and obsession to make it as complete and inclusive as
we possibly can. But the more time goes by, the more often I worry about several
things: that I will not be able to work the market well enough to distribute it
because I am doing fewer shows and fairs, that many of our followers may lose
interest in field work and Arizona collection trips, that the insect fauna is so
changed and diminished by climate change that our book becomes more of a
historical account, and that books, as a medium, lose out to all those phone
apps that promise identifications that are probably not as accurate, but fast
and easy. On the other hand, the project has given me years of adventures in the field often in the company of great friends, much learning and discovery, hours of satisfying creative work at the computer. I would not want to miss a minute of it.
Well, so much for any attempt at permanency. You say: but what will be
left of you after you are gone? My answer is that at least I will not take up
space from those who come after. Until then, I'm going to enjoy it while it lasts, whatever it is.