Tags
beauty, Deborah J. Brasket, fog, life, Mist, Nature, Philosophy, photography, Science

By Don Hong-Oai
I’ve long been drawn to images of fog and mist. Part of it is the feel for the ephemeral and mysterious, things half formed, half hidden. Emerging from a soft nebulous background but not fully formed.
Things caught in a state of transition, in the midst of becoming what is or could be. Or slowly dissolving back into mere mist or shadow, what was or could have been.

Some of my fascination has to do with the contrast between the softness and starkness of the images, how things are reduced to their elemental forms the way black and white photos will do.
All but the starkest, darkest trunks and branches revealed while the fog swallows the rest. All that’s left is the essential, the finely sculpted, restrained and elegant.
Bare branches naked and exposed, lifted in soft white hands
I think images of mist and fog speak to me because they ring true. They reveal in stark and dreamy notes how ephemeral it all is, this life we live, the forms and forces of nature. All in flux, in constant motion, emerging and dissolving over and over, without end.
The first law of thermodynamics states how energy changes from one form to another, but never disappears.
The new fourth law proposed by some scientists is still uncertain, but moving toward the emergent, a law of motion where things are constantly pushed to the edge of chaos and the brink of “perpetual novelty,” an immense field of endless potentiality.
I see that too in these photos.
At noon in full summer, in the bright sunshine, with all our leaves shimmering, richly detailed, brimming lushly, dripping with color, we hold life firmly in hand, our hearts aching with joy, with the pure bliss of being, and we think we will last forever.

But when the day is in transition, at dawn or dusk, emerging from darkness or drifting toward it, when mist or fog hides all but the faint essential lines of life, we see a starker and at the same time softer reality. But just as beautiful, and just as enduring.
For what could be more constant and eternal than the fleeting?
Or that which emerges, fragile and half-formed, from the fertile wombs of earth and stars, seas and seeds, dreams and desires and the lusts of ages that brought us all to the brink of being.

[Adapted from a 2012 post]
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Neat post! Me too 😊💓💓
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Nice to see you here, Laina. Thank you.
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You’re very welcome! It’s nice to be here 💟💟
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The beauty of your posts inspire me.
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I can’t tell you how much that means to me, Catherine.
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Me, too!
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Me too! Love this post!
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Thank you, Margaret! So happy you love it.
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Your fascination for aspects in transition and that which is partially emerging hooks on nicely to my fascination for the same things while reading/viewing. The way you illustrate your thoughts with the pictures, no telling which came first, imagery or description – the way each feeds the other…. the newness of the mist, the unveiling…. the shifting perceptual landscape
Wonderful! 💗
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You are so right. It’s hard to know which comes first. I too am fascinated by the same things when reading. Even the process of reading, word by word, shows a gentle emerging of thought and understanding. So glad you brought this into the conversation as well.
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Ever evolving…that seems to be a theme in your most lovely posts…and one from which I draw much inspiration.
peace and foggy misty travels
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Thank you, Laura. It does seem to be a theme I’m drawn to,
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Your post feels dreamy, like fog, like waking from sleep slowly. Lovely and evocative and mysterious.
Having lived in a foggy city on the east coast of Canada, where we once endured 9 consecutive days of varying depths of fog, it lost its charm. After a few days it felt suffocating and strangely blinding and I remember by day 8 waving my arms as I walked to school trying to push it away. But I do enjoy a fleeting ground mist of the kind that sometimes appears in the early morning before the sun burns it off. It hides the trunks of trees and the tops look like they’re going to float away.
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‘Waking from sleep slowly . . ” I like that. You have a lovely way of putting things. I love your image of trying to push the fog away too. And the tops of trees floating away. I can see how days of heavy fog would feel oppressive, something you’d want to escape.It’s better when it’s fleeting, when you watch it coming or going, or hugging the ground.
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It’s a great effect when done in watercolor!
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I love fog and mist tooo… for me it is the Mystery the adds the drama to the photos and places that I enjoy so much…. lovely photos.
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Thank you, Jolynn. “The mystery in the midst of things”, yes, that too.
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Lovely mist-erious!
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I like that, Peter!
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This is one of the most beautiful things I have ever read!
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So kind of you to say. Thank you.
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