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by Stefan Rohner at Fri Sep 14 09:06:19 UTC 2007 (ed. May 18 2008) Ibiza, Spain | Bookmark this | Digg this |



by Aga Łuczakowska | 14 Sep 2007 09:09 | Katowice, Poland |


by erica mcdonald | 14 Sep 2007 11:09 (ed. Sep 14 2007) | New York, United States |


by Velibor Bozovic | 14 Sep 2007 12:09 | Montreal, Canada |


by saverio serravezza | 14 Sep 2007 12:09 (ed. Sep 14 2007) | Terni, Italy |
wonderful!

by Stefan Rohner | 14 Sep 2007 12:09 | Ibiza, Spain |


by Stefan Rohner | 14 Sep 2007 12:09 | Ibiza, Spain |
oohhh.. this is wonderfull!!
Where was it taken? India?

by saverio serravezza | 14 Sep 2007 13:09 | Terni, Italy |
!070623_Seamus, Simon and Sculpture.jpg!

!070623_Simon.jpg!

!070623_Seamus.jpg!

by J-F Vergel | 14 Sep 2007 13:09 | New York City, United States |
Saverio, thanks, yes in New Delhi. regards Stefan

by Stefan Rohner | 14 Sep 2007 13:09 | Ibiza, Spain |
My son’s friends at my house, I ended up sleeping on the balcony…



by Velibor Bozovic | 14 Sep 2007 13:09 | Montreal, Canada |
Photo Sharing and Video Hosting at Photobucket

by mustafah abdulaziz | 14 Sep 2007 14:09 | Philadelphia, United States |
Hi Stefan a great photograph. Mustafah I like the expression here, a really funny one.

Friends can you plz tell me how to show up photos here in the thread, I also like to submit one or two photos.

Regards
Santanu

by santanu chakrabarti | 14 Sep 2007 14:09 | Kolkata, India |
Santanu: Real simple, mate. Go to http://photobucket.com, create a profile and upload some small-ish JPEGs and then use the link they provide to show. Cake.

by mustafah abdulaziz | 14 Sep 2007 14:09 | Philadelphia, United States |


by Nacho Hernandez | 14 Sep 2007 14:09 | Washington DC, United States |


by Nacho Hernandez | 14 Sep 2007 14:09 | Washington DC, United States |
Photo Sharing and Video Hosting at Photobucket

by mustafah abdulaziz | 14 Sep 2007 15:09 | Philadelphia, United States |


by Alice Smeets | 14 Sep 2007 15:09 | Eupen, Belgium |


by Pete Woronowski | 14 Sep 2007 15:09 | Saskatchewan, Canada |


by Stefan Rohner | 14 Sep 2007 17:09 | Ibiza, Spain |


by saverio serravezza | 14 Sep 2007 17:09 | Terni, Italy |



by saverio serravezza | 14 Sep 2007 17:09 (ed. Sep 14 2007) | Terni, Italy |


by Pete Woronowski | 14 Sep 2007 18:09 | Saskatchewan, Canada |


by David Sperry | 14 Sep 2007 20:09 (ed. Sep 14 2007) | nyc, United States |


by Jack Lenk | 14 Sep 2007 20:09 | Providence, RI, United States |
Hi friends,

Here is my small contribution. I would be glad if you like it.

TheBoy

TheBoy(1)

regards
Santanu

by santanu chakrabarti | 14 Sep 2007 20:09 | Kolkata, India |
other engaged

Africa 2007

Varanasi, India

ragdolls

glassed

by Suchitra Vijayan | 14 Sep 2007 21:09 | Stanford, United States |


by Stefan Rohner | 14 Sep 2007 22:09 | Ibiza, Spain |


by Stefan Rohner | 14 Sep 2007 22:09 (ed. Sep 14 2007) | Ibiza, Spain |


by Jack Lenk | 14 Sep 2007 22:09 | Providence, RI, United States |
Photo Sharing and Video Hosting at Photobucket

by mustafah abdulaziz | 14 Sep 2007 22:09 | Philadelphia, United States |


by Alice Smeets | 14 Sep 2007 22:09 | Eupen, Belgium |
Girls

by Sarah Underhill | 15 Sep 2007 00:09 (ed. Sep 15 2007) | Boston, United States |



by Scott Mallon | 15 Sep 2007 03:09 | Bangkok, Thailand |


by Stefan Rohner | 15 Sep 2007 07:09 | Ibiza, Spain |
Brothers

by Jim O'Connell | 15 Sep 2007 08:09 | Tokyo, Japan |


by saverio serravezza | 15 Sep 2007 09:09 | Terni, Italy |



by saverio serravezza | 15 Sep 2007 10:09 (ed. Sep 15 2007) | Terni, Italy |
wow!!! soooo many great photographs!!!!

by santanu chakrabarti | 15 Sep 2007 15:09 | Kolkata, India |


by Ed Leveckis | 16 Sep 2007 07:09 | New York, United States |


by Ed Leveckis | 16 Sep 2007 07:09 | New York, United States |


by Ed Leveckis | 16 Sep 2007 07:09 | New York, United States |


by Ravi Jaswal | 16 Sep 2007 08:09 | Kamloops, Canada |


by Pete Woronowski | 16 Sep 2007 15:09 | Saskatchewan, Canada |
Photo Sharing and Video Hosting at Photobucket

by mustafah abdulaziz | 16 Sep 2007 16:09 | Philadelphia, United States |


by Nacho Hernandez | 16 Sep 2007 16:09 | Washington DC, United States |
wooooow… there some amazing images in this topic… :-D Gotta love photography!

by Guido Van Damme | 16 Sep 2007 19:09 | Lokeren, Belgium |


by Stefan Rohner | 24 Sep 2007 18:09 | Ibiza, Spain |


by Stefan Rohner | 24 Sep 2007 18:09 | Ibiza, Spain |


by Pete Woronowski | 24 Sep 2007 18:09 | Saskatchewan, Canada |


by Pete Woronowski | 24 Sep 2007 18:09 | Saskatchewan, Canada |


by Akaky | 24 Sep 2007 19:09 | New York, United States |
Some more from me – shot with newly bought Canon A710 IS

WeAreHappy

Contemplation

by santanu chakrabarti | 24 Sep 2007 21:09 | Kolkata, India |















by Ian Taylor | 24 Sep 2007 23:09 | Hong Kong, China |
My wife and I just had out first!! Her name is Mela…born September 11, 2007 at 9:19am. Overwhelmed with joy…



by Matt Gainer | 24 Sep 2007 23:09 (ed. Sep 24 2007) | Los Angeles, United States |
Congrats Matt!



by Pete Woronowski | 25 Sep 2007 01:09 | Saskatchewan, Canada |
In extremely low light at a puppet theater in Central Park, Manhattan.


by Paul Treacy | 25 Sep 2007 01:09 | New York City, United States |
Little Connor (son 2) watering in the Bronx Botanical Gardens.


by Paul Treacy | 25 Sep 2007 01:09 | New York City, United States |
That watering shot was made yesterday.

by Paul Treacy | 25 Sep 2007 01:09 | New York City, United States |


by Paul Treacy | 25 Sep 2007 01:09 | New York City, United States |

“Welcome to our sector” was Eoin’s title for this piece.

by Paul Treacy | 25 Sep 2007 01:09 | New York City, United States |
This is my favorite at the moment. Wave Hill in the Bronx.



That’s enough from me for this evening. Some gorgeous work here in this thread. Lots and lots of lovely little people.

by Paul Treacy | 25 Sep 2007 01:09 (ed. Dec 10 2007) | New York City, United States |

My Friends…
















70Rai, Klongtoey, Bangkok



by Yoonki Kim | 25 Sep 2007 02:09 (ed. Sep 25 2007) | Bangkok, Thailand |


by Alex Magedler | 25 Sep 2007 05:09 | Vienna, Austria |




by Alex Magedler | 25 Sep 2007 05:09 | Vienna, Austria |




by Alex Magedler | 25 Sep 2007 05:09 | Vienna, Austria |


by Alex Magedler | 25 Sep 2007 05:09 | Vienna, Austria |
Don't.

by Con O'Donoghue | 25 Sep 2007 15:09 | Barcelona, Spain |


by Liam Maloney | 25 Sep 2007 16:09 | Montreal, QC, Canada |
Thanks Pete! Matt

by Matt Gainer | 26 Sep 2007 18:09 | Los Angeles, United States |


by Stefan Rohner | 03 Oct 2007 14:10 | Ibiza, Spain |
nice thread….



by Ed Leveckis | 03 Oct 2007 15:10 | New York, United States |

Kids playing skip rope. Valenzuela, Metro Manila, Philippines. February, 2001. © Max Pasion

by Max Pasion | 04 Oct 2007 04:10 | Jersey City, NJ, United States |

A boy looking for a place to sleep at the entrance to the Quiapo Underpass. Quiapo, Manila, Philippines. December 2, 2002. © Max Pasion

by Max Pasion | 04 Oct 2007 04:10 (ed. Oct 4 2007) | Jersey City, NJ, United States |
Kids playing, Jakarta, Indonesia



by Andri Irawan | 04 Oct 2007 07:10 (ed. Oct 4 2007) | Singapore, Singapore |


by Oliver Dietze | 04 Oct 2007 10:10 | saarbrücken, Germany |




by Ian Taylor | 04 Oct 2007 14:10 | Picton, Canada |


by Desafinado | 04 Oct 2007 19:10 | Moscow, Russia |


by Akaky | 04 Oct 2007 22:10 (ed. Feb 9 2008) | New York, United States |


by Andrew Wiese | 05 Oct 2007 14:10 | Berlin, Germany |
AL-Ansar Islamic School. Anaheim, California.

Linda's graduation

by Iman Al-Dabbagh | 07 Oct 2007 08:10 (ed. Oct 7 2007) | Anaheim and Jeddah (Saudi Arab, United States |
Pasig River, Quiapo, Philippines.

Kids in Pasig river, Manila

by Iman Al-Dabbagh | 07 Oct 2007 08:10 (ed. Oct 7 2007) | Anaheim and Jeddah (Saudi Arab, United States |
Palestinian Refugee Camp, Jordan.

A year ago today, Al-Wehdat Palestinian Refugee camp. July 24, 2006

by Iman Al-Dabbagh | 07 Oct 2007 09:10 | Anaheim and Jeddah (Saudi Arab, United States |
Tijuana, Mexico.

dec 22 2005

by Iman Al-Dabbagh | 07 Oct 2007 09:10 | Anaheim and Jeddah (Saudi Arab, United States |


by Peter Harris | 07 Oct 2007 09:10 | Rome, Italy |


by Thomas Hyde | 07 Oct 2007 20:10 (ed. Oct 7 2007) | Seattle, United States |

baler, aurora province – philippines

by Ninfa Bito | 09 Oct 2007 06:10 | Manila, Philippines |


by Stefan Rohner | 09 Oct 2007 08:10 | Ibiza, Spain |


by Andrea Mazzei | 09 Oct 2007 09:10 | ho, Ghana |


by Thomas Hyde | 09 Oct 2007 18:10 | Seattle, United States |


by Stefan Rohner | 15 Oct 2007 17:10 | Ibiza, Spain |
Photo Sharing and Video Hosting at Photobucket

Photo Sharing and Video Hosting at Photobucket

Photo Sharing and Video Hosting at Photobucket

Photo Sharing and Video Hosting at Photobucket

And, I cant forget my favorite little munchkin, my little niece at her pre-school graduation…

Photo Sharing and Video Hosting at Photobucket

by Brian L Frank | 15 Oct 2007 21:10 | San Francisco, California, United States |



by Anne Holmes | 15 Oct 2007 22:10 | Planet Earth, Thailand |


by Mark Ovaska | 15 Oct 2007 22:10 | Rochester, United States |
Till glädje

by Jim O'Connell | 16 Oct 2007 06:10 | Tokyo, Japan |


by Thomas Hyde | 18 Oct 2007 18:10 | Seattle, United States |


by Jorge Uzon | 18 Oct 2007 19:10 (ed. Oct 18 2007) | Toronto, Canada |
Bir al Mshash

by Quique Kierszenbaum | 18 Oct 2007 19:10 | Jerusalem, Israel |



by Anne Holmes | 18 Oct 2007 20:10 | Planet Earth, Thailand |

All taken in Afghanistan.

by pat hattori | 18 Oct 2007 20:10 (ed. Oct 18 2007) | mechelen, Belgium |
Some more…



by pat hattori | 18 Oct 2007 20:10 | mechelen, Belgium |
Still…
Kids will be kids!



by pat hattori | 18 Oct 2007 20:10 | mechelen, Belgium |
Anne! what a picture! tears in my eyes.



by Stefan Rohner | 18 Oct 2007 21:10 | Ibiza, Spain |
Me and my daughter Echo, the love of my life, a couple of weeks ago.



by pat hattori | 18 Oct 2007 21:10 | mechelen, Belgium |


by Stefan Rohner | 18 Oct 2007 21:10 | Ibiza, Spain |
Babyboom…

That’s it

by pat hattori | 18 Oct 2007 21:10 | mechelen, Belgium |


by Gina van Hoof | 18 Oct 2007 23:10 | brussels, Belgium |


by Gina van Hoof | 18 Oct 2007 23:10 | brussels, Belgium |


by Gina van Hoof | 18 Oct 2007 23:10 | brussels, Belgium |


by Gina van Hoof | 18 Oct 2007 23:10 | brussels, Belgium |


by Jacob N. Bailey | 19 Oct 2007 00:10 | Syracuse University, N.Y., United States |


by Carina Berlingeri | 19 Oct 2007 06:10 | Ibiza, Spain |


by Stefan Rohner | 19 Oct 2007 11:10 | Ibiza, Spain |
Stefan, I really like these costumed children by the sea… Is that a series?

by J-F Vergel | 19 Oct 2007 11:10 | New York City, United States |
thank you J-F, here the pictures

http://www.ball-saal.com/MainPage/Gallery.php?type=Seri&ID=12&page=1



by Stefan Rohner | 19 Oct 2007 12:10 | Ibiza, Spain |
Thanks for the link, Stefan.

!Masks_Lynn & Mu_2!



by J-F Vergel | 19 Oct 2007 12:10 (ed. Nov 7 2007) | New York City, United States |
unicef prize deadline is coming up….

by Guy Calaf | 19 Oct 2007 15:10 | Hargeisa, Somalia |


by Thomas Hyde | 20 Oct 2007 00:10 | Seattle, United States |


by Stefan Rohner | 07 Nov 2007 19:11 | Ibiza, Spain |
Carla died on Thursday afternoon, at about the same time I found my car keys. I don’t know why that coincidence sticks in my mind, but it has. After coming into work on Thursday morning, I went to the deli down the street to get the paper and a Diet-Pepsi, which is what I usually do every morning, nothing out of the ordinary there. The day went on as it usually does; a lot of library work is fairly mundane stuff and I’ve been doing it for so long now that sometimes I think I could do my job in my sleep and not miss a thing. The day was just an ordinary Thursday morning with nothing to distinguish it from the Thursday before or the Thursday before that one except the changing numbers on the calendar. I planned to go across the river at lunchtime, to the camera store where I get my black and white film developed, and pick up some pictures of the local high school football team losing its last home game of the year. I don’t, as a rule, go anywhere during the work week; I usually pick up my photographs on Saturday, but I wanted to see this batch now instead of waiting a couple of more days and so I’d made up my mind to go get them that afternoon on my lunch hour.

I didn’t go anywhere. There are people who know how to pick a lock and hotwire a car when faced with a sudden enforced lack of mobility; I am not one of them. I need my keys. The missing keys set off a two hour frenzied hunt/panic attack, during which I retraced my entire morning and searched everything and everywhere I’d been and liberally used most of the profane, scatological, blasphemous, and obscene epithets available to the annoyed English speaker faced with such a crisis. Neither the search nor the billingsgate helped me find my keys, and now I was hungry as well, so I went down to the deli for a turkey sandwich. And there, on the shelf next to the bagels and some small packets of Russian dressing, were my keys. I don’t remember putting the keys down on the counter and leaving without them, although that’s what I must have done, but I took the keys and dropped them in my pocket and then, for some reason, I checked the time. The time was 2:35pm, those numbers forming a Fibonacci sequence, as any serious math student can tell you, on Thursday, November 1st, 2007, at which point, if the newspaper account is correct, Carla was about five minutes away from the accident that took her life.

Carla was nineteen and an art student and as tall as I am, almost, which she did to make me feel old. She always laughed when I told her that, and I knew she was laughing to be polite; even a running gag gets old quickly, but she never let on that it was time for me to come up with something new. She was a little self-conscious about being almost six feet tall at age thirteen; kids that age don’t want to be different from their friends in any way; and when I told her later to stop smoking, she was going to stunt her growth, her usual reply was, too late, and that she already had a mother, thank you.

She laughed at me a lot. The first time, I remember, was at the library. Her grandmother Carmen worked at the library then; she was our bilingual clerk and thought, for reasons I’m not sure I fathom to this day, that I would make an ideal son in law. The trouble with this idea is one familiar to any student of economics: the supply of daughters did not match the demand. In short, all three were already taken, which did not trouble me too much; being a good son in law requires no small degree of personal aptitude for the job and a fair number of diplomatic skills, skills and aptitude I lack in more or less equal abundance. Carla’s mother Julie came in carrying her one day; she needed to speak to Carmen about something or other; I forget the details, if I ever knew them, since they were speaking in Spanish and what little Spanish I know I picked up from John Wayne movies; any conversation that goes much beyond dos cervezas, por favor, or adios, amigo leaves me totally out of my depth. Carla was six or seven months old then and Julie laid her down flat on her back on the front desk, where Carla frowned at me like a bank examiner inspecting a fishy set of books. There was a line of patrons waiting to check out their books and videos and I announced that as part of a pilot program the library would now check out infants as well as books, but only for two weeks; because of the high demand for newborns and the relative shortage of them in the system, there could be no renewals at this time. Thinking of it now, it doesn’t seem terribly funny, but the people on line laughed, and I suppose because they laughed Carla smiled and laughed as well. That was the first time.

In my memory, Carla was always happy, except for one Halloween where I made an unkind wisecrack about her Indian princess costume that she heard and sent her crying to her mother. I felt like a louse, as well I should, but by Christmas, all was forgiven. I think one reason why I remember her this way is that I saw her most often at Christmas time, when all children are giddy with anticipation. Christmas was especially exciting for Carla, because there was more of it for her; after the nine o’clock Spanish language Mass on Christmas Eve, there would be tons of gifts to open at her grandmother’s house. And she’d laugh at me when I said she was going to get into trouble, double dipping into Santa’s bag like that. She was in la pastorela too, the annual Christmas pageant put on by the children of the parish, once, if I remember this correctly, as the Blessed Virgin, and the second time as the angel who holds the Star of Bethlehem over the manger. She looked incredibly happy at being the center of attention as she walked slowly down the center aisle of St. John’s while the choir sang soft Spanish hymns and the priest read the Gospel story of the birth of Christ, and the little boy playing the part of St. Joseph looking as though he’d rather be almost anywhere else on this planet than where he was right now.

That was then. The last time I saw Carla was in the middle of the street during the annual Hat Parade in May. She was still almost as tall as I am and she still laughed when I told her she was doing it to make me feel old. She was excited too; she had a new apartment and she enjoyed her classes at art school, so things were going pretty good for her. We said some other things, the usual pleasantries you say when you haven’t seen someone for awhile; I forget what right off the top of my head, and she laughed again and said, see you. I’m pretty sure I said so long, and I think I told her to enjoy her weekend. And then we went our separate ways. I never saw her again.

On Ash Wednesday, Roman Catholics go to Mass and receive an ashen mark on their foreheads from the priest, who intones, as he makes the Sign of the Cross on the believer’s forehead, remember, man, that thou art dust and unto dust thou shalt return. It is a reminder of our common and inevitable mortality, but says nothing of the how and when and why we die. Still less does it explain the death of a young woman with everything to live for. Almost anything anyone can say in such a situation is trite and foolish-sounding, as most things do in the actual presence of death. When the old die, we can tell ourselves comfortable lies to ease the pain: he was suffering so much, it was better this way, he’d lived his life, he’s in a better place now—and then we can repeat those comfortable lies to our friends, who will echo them back to us, the better to get us through the ordeal. What can we tell ourselves about the death of a nineteen-year-old girl that will somehow lessen the pain of the loss? Nothing really, only that God must have a purpose for it all, an argument God makes Himself in the Book of Job, when He speaks to Job from the midst of the whirlwind, demanding to know, when Job asks Him why he is suffering, where Job was when the Lord laid the foundations of the world. Job accepts that there must be a greater purpose to his suffering, but, and my apologies to the pious here, the Almighty does not come off well in the Book of Job, and His explanation, whether it comes from the middle of a tempest or not, has always sounded pretty thin to me. The grieving do not want to hear that this tragedy makes some cosmic sense to someone; they want an explanation that makes sense to them. But there is no explanation forthcoming and probably none that the grieving would find acceptable. There is only the reality that Carla is gone and we will not see her any more. So that leaves the trite, the hackneyed, and the foolish-sounding things that people say at times like these, and I said those things and saw the people from the several universes of Carla’s life come in to see her family and say them as well, because there are no words that can express what anyone really wants to say. Those words don’t exist in any language and never have, I think.

She was buried on Monday in an old Dutch Reformed cemetery near her grandfather, on the slope of a hill that stretches down to a wide valley dotted with farmhouses and that eventually sweeps up to the long line of the Shawangunk Mountains along the horizon, on one of those perfect New York autumn days where the air is crisp and cool and the trees bright with scarlet and gold and the clouds drift lazily by on a soft breeze across a sky too blue to be real. I left after the service, while her family and the other mourners went to the church hall for something to eat. As I made the turn onto the highway, I could see the sextons standing at her gravesite, lowering the casket into the ground. I looked away, as though I were somehow violating Carla’s privacy by watching her final moments in the light of day, and turned on the radio. They were playing something by Wagner, the overture to Tannhauser, I think, and I snapped the radio off; I didn’t want to listen to Wagner and his ten ton flummery now. About twenty minutes later, having gotten myself hopelessly lost on what, for me, is the wrong side of the river, I turned the radio on again. Something by Mozart had just ended and the announcer—classical music stations do not have disc jockeys, they have announcers—put on Maurice Ravel’s Pavane for a dead princess. As I listened to the mournful notes of Ravel’s elegiac music and tried to figure out how to find my way home, I could feel the warm sunshine stream through the windows and I thought of Carla again, standing with her mother in the middle of Main Street the last time I saw her, still as tall as I am, almost, and who didn’t, in the end, have to worry about the health hazards of cigarette smoking after all, enjoying herself and the day tremendously, and then, for a long moment, I did feel old.

by Akaky | 07 Nov 2007 19:11 (ed. May 17 2008) | New York, United States |