I never thought that the decline and ultimate failure of an inexpensive hard drive would stir up so many thoughts about how attached I am to physical things, outcomes of day-to-day events, the feeling of needing to be in control and, mostly my attachment to the idea that there is a comforting constancy to my life.
The reality, at least as I see it, is that everything we have, including our own lives, has a parabola of existence. In the example of lifeforms we are born, we grow, we learn, we thrive and then at some point we reach the top of our arc and begin to participate in the process of entropy. The downward slide from the peak of our potential.
Here's my favorite simple definition from the Oxford Dictionary: the degree of disorder or uncertainty in a system. 2. a. : the degradation of the matter and energy in the universe to an ultimate state of inert uniformity. Entropy is the general trend of the universe toward death and disorder.
Our own slides toward dissolution can be relatively quick or agonizingly long. At least in context.
When I realized that I was unable to access the information on one of my hard drives I felt a sense of betrayal. I know that doesn't make a lot of sense but since so few of the hard drives I've used up till now have actually failed (as opposed to just getting "filled up.") I had the illogical presumption that life would go on in the same fashion from now until much later. This started me down the path, yesterday, of assuming that the life and death cycle of all the things I think I depend on might be accelerating. After all, it was just last week that our microwave oven gave up the ghost...
I'm not totally unused to things failing and becoming unusable. The plastic lenses on swim goggles eventually become fogged by chemicals, abrasion and UV light and they eventually become unusable. I have no issue with that. I understand the process and replacing them with new goggles is easy and inexpensive. Shoes are another thing that wears out. And most modern shoes aren't really made to be repaired. When the soles decay beyond a certain point it is time to replace them. Sometimes I feel a twinge of loss when I have to let go of a great pair of hiking shoes but, again, I understood from the beginning that those shoes would have finite useful "life span."
In the case of this hard drive though I felt a different kind of loss since it was a vessel for my work. Both personal and professional. Logically, I know that if the files are so very important that I can have them recovered and moved to a series of newer and newer hard drives but where does it all end? How does it all end? I was letting the loss of the HD become a metaphor for my life as an artist. The loss of files a symbol for the loss of control over small parts of my own, personal art universe. A harbinger of a coming, accelerating decay toward an end. Had I become that attached to my self generated perception of the value of the work? Had I become the victim of my own identification with what my job and my art represents back to me? It appears so.
As I left the house this morning to go to the swimming pool I said to myself, "Oh Hell, Entropy is going to end up being my word for the day." I was in a quiet and sour mood. I even allowed myself to conjecture that perhaps swimming had no real value beyond being a vainglorious attempt to slow down or control my own physical and mental entropy.
But then I got in the water. I could feel the flow of the swim. As I focused on having as technically perfect a "front catch" as I could my mind started off on its own, processing all the feelings I was having and had over the previous 24 hours. I realized in the moment that I had forgotten the most important concept I learned from studying the life of Buddha. ("Old Path White Clouds" by Thich Hat Hahn). That concept being the value of resisting or rejecting desire. Non-attachment to physical things or outcomes. I had made the files on the drive important even though, in the long, medium and short run, their loss was neither good nor bad. It just was. And all the energy I was putting into battling against their loss was just causing me to be sad. Frustrated. And ineffectual.
I don't believe in the idea that everything happens for a reason. I think most things are random and chaotic. And physics tells us that entropy is a reality for....everything. We'll all die. All (statistically) hard drives will eventually become dysfunctional. Batteries will run out of energy. Tires will wear out. Our brains will slow down and eventually become less stable. We might be able to slow the process but we joust with an "opponent" that holds all the high cards.
The best way to "fight" the loss of something is to let it go. But dammit! Why do I still want to show that hard drive who's boss? Mostly because life on the way up the parabola of my existence has been so easy and fun. Few things go wrong. But now? Will the journey into chaos accelerate? What's next?
Swim Zen tells me to stop fighting things that are out of my control. Concentrate (be mindful) on doing the right things day to day. Concentrate on having the right thoughts every day. And to let go of the need to hold onto stuff so tightly; as well as the almost compulsive need to try controlling the processes.
I should have learned by now that you have to loosen up the reins on life if you want to let in a bit of creativity, whimsy and happiness. This might just work out. One way or another I am almost certain that it will. As I've said before, "Happiness is self-inflicted." The same can be said for sadness.
My swim was quite nice.
One of the reasons I like cycling. The "Flow". The Zone. Movement which satisfies some deep part of my brain which contains no language nor ability to articulate it. But gives me a feeling in my gut of satisfaction despite what is, at times, deep pain.
ReplyDeleteEntropy may have taken that, though. A second health crisis. This time MedFlight was mentioned. Decades of eating well and cardio through thousands of miles on the bike. Of clean living and sustaining enjoyment in every day. But I reconciled the threat to my life, this second time, as entropy. Nothing I could do. Except take a hint from a young musician named Ren. Who describes in spoken word and song ("Hi Ren")his battle with unexplained illness and subsequent psychosis. But learns, in his words, to stop fighting against the dance of life. And how the dance got better when he learned to relax. At his young age.
I hiked clean out of my boots this year. They disintegrated thankfully at the end of a hike while recovering from my medical crisis. Broken in and friendly, I looked at these not very old boots and thought: time to move on.
May I have the strength to apply that perspective if the relatively new dishwasher craps out too soon ...
thanks Mitch!
ReplyDeleteGreat post! I think the second title should be "Zen and the Art of Hard Drive Maintenance".
ReplyDeleteFunny, how the death of a non-living entity effects people differently. After a long career as a database administrator, it would have given me great satisfaction after restoring all the images from backup(s) and proving that my backup plan worked. As a DBA, I used to test my backup plan on a quarterly basis, in a non-production environment of course, so that I would have confidence that in an emergency, things would go as planned.
However, I was bummed out for days when my Nikon FE2's shutter died on me. It was like a lost a close friend.
Ignoring the Zen of this post for a moment and circling back to the hard drive. Are you sure it's the drive and not the enclosure? Enclosures can be replaced.
ReplyDeleteBack to the Zen...fun post to read. Thanks!
db
Kirk, this is one of your best "non-photography" articles. Thank you . . . you write exceptionally clearly and well about LIFE.
ReplyDeleteThis particular post has me linking wabi-sabi, impermanence, kintsugi, and such, together with my thoroughly enjoyable though sporadic listenings to/re-readings of Alan Watts.
Plus today is a Bodhi Day.
Wise words there, old mate.
ReplyDeleteI once experienced extreme detachment for hours a day (not always the same number of hours) for a month and a half or so, and what I found was that real detachment has no content. None. It's fundamentally meaningless. If you want meaning in your life, you have to attach.
ReplyDelete"I never thought that the decline and ultimate failure of an inexpensive hard drive would stir up so many thoughts about how attached I am to physical things, outcomes of day-to-day events, the feeling of needing to be in control and, mostly my attachment to the idea that there is a comforting constancy to my life."
All good signs that you're actually alive, IMHO. I broke my right arm up by my shoulder a couple years ago, and despite a titanium collar, its never been quite right. I was at the gym lifting today, and the shoulder hurts (and the Mayo clinic said it would continue to hurt, and I should lift anyway.) So in the gym today, I was thinking, hurting is good. You're alive.
One way you could perhaps become less angsty about this stuff is to buy only the best to avoid disappointment, and hence, the waste of your time. A waste of time really is like a little death. You could lean away from that with the 110mm f2.0.
Actual question: if you were to buy a LED light panel(s) in an effort to get more serious about portraits, which would you recommend?
JC, I'll just continue to practice fake detachment for now....
ReplyDeleteAs for LED lights... I've been using Nanlites FS series of monolight styled fixtures. They make a more expensive line but I'm happy with the performance of the FS line. I have on FS300 and two of the FS200 lights. They accept Bowens mount accessories and can also be used with photo umbrellas. The ones I have plug into the wall. More expensive versions can be battery driven but that's not something I need from these lights. I have a couple of Nanlite panels that are battery powered.
The company makes two versions of the FS lights I use. One version is daylight balanced only. And they are very good with very, very nice rendering of flesh tones. They also make models that can be adjusted from 2400K to 6500K but I resist them because it's hard to get repeatable color results. And you get less total power at the end points of the color spectrum.
I have a set of Godox LED light that are similar but the color isn't as nice as that of the Nanlites. I use them when I just need to add light to a big area of background.
A couple of the FS-200s would be a nice starting point. You can put soft boxes on them or umbrellas. Or you can use them with diffuser panels like the Chimera 48 inch ENG panel. The COB design of the monolight style fixtures makes them usable with softboxes where a flat panel with hundreds of bulbs are far less adaptable.
These are just my preference but I felt my choice was validated when I arrived on a TV production set and all the lights used by a higher end video crew were the same FS Nanlites.
That's my recommendation for portrait stuff. There are more expensive brands out there but I'm not sure they are needed for most conventional applications.
I never realized this, until I read this post, that I have been lucky. I have had the (mis?)fortune of having several hard drives lives cut too prematurely short. I never buy the "cheap" stuff, always "enterprise" grade, because I cannot "afford" to loose a single frame.
ReplyDeleteAnd here I was, panicking, fretting and cursing every time one died, when I should have been grateful. I have now become totally indifferent to the possibility of loss since I have built a "bullet-proof" backup system that has enough enough redundant backups to pave a road. Every time a drive dies, I whip out the credit card and gain satisfaction from the fact that I have made Seagate/WD/Toshiba just a sliver of a bit richer.
Thanks Kirk.
It is interesting that we understand decay scientifically and theologically, but have no idea what brings forth life everywhere from the freezing cold, to boiling hot springs, to cracks in the sidewalk.
ReplyDeleteThanks Kirk.
ReplyDeleteMost welcome.
ReplyDeleteEverything has a shelf life.
ReplyDeleteKirk
ReplyDeleteDuring my days as an engineering student, my Physics classes stated that because of entropy the Universe was expanding at a constant rate. After some personal reflection on the subject the following is my take on the concept of entropy:
If entropy is a constant, it must be a zero sum game.
If entropy is a zero sum game, good events must balance bad events.
If good and bad balance, if I am having a good day, someone else is having a bad one.
If I am having a bad day it is simply my turn. It will pass.
PaulB
Without entropy, humans would not exist
ReplyDeleteEric
I haven't been here in a while ... fired up My Yahoo this morning in the first time in forever, remembered all of the fine RSS feeds I have been missing out on.
ReplyDeleteRE: entropy, I remember thinking my toddler kids were little entropy machines, and my job (along with the Mrs) was to be the anti-entropy overlords, providing a tiny bit of order to the chaos of life.
"The only constant is change", a line I heard at my UCSD graduation ceremony. It's stuck with me to this day. We just have to flex with the times, adjust to maintain some order and organization!