I have been taking it easy for some time. Probably has to do with the darkening and wet days we get up here. We did get out with the kids, however, some time ago.
Which way did the sun go?
Bravo, Jarmo, this is a special gift for us all!
One would be mistaken to think that this is merely a memento of happy family times. I find the picture to have much more gravitas than that. It is, to my mind an excellent photograph worth preserving and collecting. It transcends the preciousness of personal nostalgia to be probative of the path the next generation will travel when they take our place. I's a beautiful balance of trees huddled in the background, shrouded in mist and the clear sparkle of life of a young child with her own life an unblemished record, yet to be written, as she stops for us on the well-trodden, snow covered, path through this bucolic landscape. Marks, of many previous travelers, provide a "texture" that symbolize to me "the community", before and after her, of which she must be part.
Of course, Jarmo, this is my favorite. Just like Antonio, I think of my grandkids when I see this picture. I also like it as one has a lone child in an apparently large unspoiled area. The photograph is itself interesting, as you have included for the child a path. That immediately evokes a concept of "a life's journey". I note that she does not obstruct the path for others, but stands to one side, as if to be a modest part of the entire scene. What you might have done, by taking her to this place, is to plant seeds of a lasting, loving gift of seeing the wisdom in cherishing and championing such scenery!
The compelling idea -
- "Kids should be exposed to the parts of the land not covered with asphalt and concrete"-
is clearly to the forefront of my mind and I'm so happy for this.
Each child, so exposed, might, one day, add their own voice in defense of preserving some of nature's wild state. Thanks for sharing this personal but still evocative image.
Asher