Sometimes you meet people that you understand very
quickly, and who understand you. Alfie and I were like that. We were
born in the same year, 1969. We were the baby busters who arrived on
this planet after all of those baby boomers had already blazed their
path to greatness and used up a considerable amount of resources in
doing so. Both of us understood what it is like to get to the table too
late for the big helping of easy come opportunities. Alfie and I also
had the shared history of being freelancing artists, him as a
photographer and me as a performer, who had managed the pressures of
supporting children without the security of being an employee. Pursuing
your professional passion when it is only your own provision that you
are risking is one thing, but to pursue your passion with a small crowd
of foot growing dependents that need supper every night, that is a more
complicated and costly type of bravery.
After discovering that we had a lot in common, Alfie
suggested that we do an exchange of talent. He would photograph me and I
would write an article about portraits for his website Japanorama. This
would also allow me to meet his beautiful family. About a week later
the two of us did the planned portrait shoot and I got to spend an
afternoon with the Goodriches. I even got to take a nap in the kids room
before eating the delicious supper that his wife prepared for us that
evening, because people who are recovering from pneumonia need a lot of
naps. Supper with the Goodriches was actually my first meal shared in a
home since I had arrived in Japan. Until that evening for almost four
months my every meal had been in isolation, in public, or in a hospital
bed.
During the photoshoot before my nap and supper with
the Goodriches, I was surprised at how quickly and accurately Alfie was
able to capture the images that expressed what I was feeling. Before we
got together I had confided in Alfie about some of the things that were
happening in my life and what I wanted to say in the portrait. At that
time it had taken everything I had within me in order to survive and to
overcome the initial circumstantial difficulties that met me upon my
arrival in Japan, the place where I felt so passionately it was my
destiny to be. My youngest son was eighteen and back in Canada living in
a small apartment on my friend's property during his grade twelve year.
The trials I was encountering in Japan were making it hard for me to
predict my long term situation and my ability to provide for him.
Popular opinion back home was that I should give up on things working
out in Japan and return to Canada. However after almost dying by myself
on my apartment floor in a city full of strangers a few weeks earlier,
and experiencing fever induced hallucinations, and honestly being
terrified that my young adult children were possibly hours away from not
having a mother anymore, I had come to believe, possibly for the first time in my life, that I was actually an
incredibly important person. Since those scary moments of facing my
mortality I believed that I was important enough to pursue my dream of
having a life in Japan where I felt I could be of much greater benefit
to others than in a dead end local job back in Canada. It was in
consideration of the way that I was feeling, stronger than ever in
spirit, albeit still needing frequent naps due to my physical state,
that I wanted Alfie to record those emotions visually through the medium of a photographic portrait. I wanted him to capture my
feelings of spiritual strength during a time of physical weakness. I
knew that I did not need to return to Canada. I knew that I just needed to be
myself, to stick some tough things out, and to believe that things would work
themselves out, which they did.
A brilliant photographer and a beautiful person,
Alfie put into images the sentiments that I was feeling. He helped me to
express that I was not ashamed to be who I am, to pursue what I feel is
my fate, and to ask for and to receive help along the way to it. The
photographs that Alfie took remind me that I am an intense woman who
resides in a physical form that reflects exactly who I am; strong,
solid, mature, feminine, and non apologetically passionate. I do not
behave in a way that has a stamp of socially accepted responsibility on
it. Instead my life is about learning, experimentation, and the determination to be of the greatest benefit
possible to others by using my talents and accepting and rejoicing in
the life experiences that are uniquely mine while following the exact
pursuits that bring my soul the greatest amount of joy. I found almost
dying while alone in a foreign country a wonderful reminder of such
things and I am grateful for every single circumstantial trial that met
me upon my arrival in Japan. Those experiences made me a stronger and
more determined person.
The above would make a wonderful conclusion to what
happened when Alfie and I collaborated on a portrait session, however
there is more to the story that makes those photographs from one year ago even more meaningful to me. The unexpected and unpleasant event of having plastic surgery on my face four months ago due to a cancer diagnosis has permanently
altered my appearance. I will never again have the scar free face
that Alfie photographed. How much more precious to have those Alfie
Goodrich images now that I am temporarily disfigured and awaiting my
physical healing and long term facial changes as created by my
plastic surgeon? Alfie and my portrait session and the circumstances
that followed reminded me of the importance of grabbing the moments of
now, to work with the artists and circumstances that are available to us in each moment in order to create what we
can, when we can, things that may no longer be available to us in the
future. I believe it is the fleetingness of opportunities that makes our
'now's so precious. Thank you Alfie for grabbing that winter now with me
and for giving me the gift of documenting images of my strength and
beauty in Tokyo in January of 2012. You are a wonderful artist and I
consider myself privileged to have been photographed by you and to call
you my friend.
To see more of Alfie's amazing photography click on the links below;
To see more of Alfie's amazing photography click on the links below;