Category Archives: Photography

No Matter Where

I grew up in a suburb outside Charlotte curious about everyone and everything from a place located anywhere but there.

I wanted to know what people ate, what they believed and why they believed it.

One constant in all of my travel, friendship and life experiences is the appreciation of landscape, cityscape and what people cultivate.

When I write, my favorite part of the story is deciding how my town will look or if the landscape is resonant of the narrow hills on which I grew. If the land flows alongside a river, or if is flat and full of golden corn.

True of many writers from the Carolinas, I’m attached the land and different cityscapes.

As a small city journalist, I studied the different structure of a town and how it influences the citizens.

As the wife of a Christmas tree farmer’s son, I learned what passion for land means:

It is something, in spite of all the words in the English language, I could not portray to you.

The passion of which I write is born and breathes with men and women like my husband.

A shot of my father-in-law’s farm where apple trees once produced fruit. The Christmas trees grew on another part of the land.


Flowers outside my father-in-law’s house.

My son, Charles, on a John Deere tractor in his grandfather’s barn.

Flowers Charles brought to John and me.


John does a project for his father where tomato plants will later grow.

On days I take my son to the park, John, my husband, reminds me he had worked on a farm. In his spare time, he and his siblings played in their imaginary world on the acres of their parents’ farm land. The garden provided food for their table.

As a reporter, I covered towns with an agricultural background. I understood terms such as grass fed beef and how a farmer’s soy bean crop was ruined by too much rain.

Now when I shop and cook, I go to a farmer’s market where my husband last summer restored the roof. Crops are grown by farmers from North and South Carolina. Anywhere else I shop I look for the same freshness.

Food, like landscape, inspires with its many colors, traditions throughout the world, smells and sounds.

Salad with fresh tomatoes and lemon as a garnish from the farmer’s market.

S

Salmon plated over brown rice and fresh cooked spinach, feta and onions.

Food from the land or city takes us somewhere we long for, even when we cannot afford the plane ticket.

We yearn for it.

It influences us.

Therefore, we imagine a place of which we write.

Where is your place?

By Rebecca T. Dickinson

Days of Our Reading Lives: This Rock, Book Review

This Rock by Robert Morgan tells the struggle of a family in the Blue Ridge Mountains of North Carolina.

Rating:


Sum It Up:

Powell brothers, Moody and Muir, faceoff in a struggle to become men without a father. Ginny, their widowed mother, pushes younger brother, Muir, harder to work on the farm. Ambitious, Muir wants to take his life another step and achieve something monumental.

On the other hand, Ginny waits for Moody to sober up from his wild bootlegging nights before she bothers him. Moody and Muir argue and fight to the point Moody burns down a house Muir attempts to build in the beginning of the book.

After the deaths of her oldest daughter and husband, Ginny continues to struggle with widowhood and dedicates herself to the care of her family.

As Moody attempts to change near the end and Muir journeys to discover his purpose, This Rock explodes to show what one brother will do for the other no matter the cost.


Photo taken during a trip through the Blue Ridge Mountains.

Thoughts:

I gave the book four stars out of five. Morgan’s writing reads with beautiful prose-poetry of nature and how people work. With the intimate and down-in-the-dirt farm imagery similar to poet Josephine Dickinson’s Silence Fell, Morgan weaves imagery and work into a magnificent blue sky of his own.

In the few scenes when there was action, you were a part of it. You wanted to watch and try to get Muir and Moody to get along.

Past reviews describe the book as gritty. When it comes to it, the farm, the bootlegging, the church and the ending all capture that grit and dirt. Morgan does a great job making the reader grit his or her teeth while reading intense scenes, such as the moment Moody holds a knife against Muir or when Ginny finds Moody all beat up.

Ginny is a great character. One of the best chapters Morgan writes is when she thinks about her widowhood. She says the loved dead always walk with you.

The downside of This Rock was Morgan did not fully develop his characters other than Ginny and Muir. As I wrote in my previous post, I expected the book the read from Muir and Moody’s point-of-view. Moody was a shadow at times, and I wanted to enter Chesnut Springs, where the bootleggers lived. I wanted to see the action he experienced in Chesnut Springs.

Peg Early – a character mentioned throughout the book, but seen one time – could have been more fleshed out had Morgan wanted to focus more on the relationship between the brothers. The book left the disconnection between brothers at points.

What kept me from a 5-star rating was the end of This Rock. Maybe Morgan wanted a disconnected ending. A lot was left unresolved. It didn’t make sense. The only theme the end carried with the book was grit.

But, I will read Robert Morgan again.


Southern poets are still writing narrative poems, poems in forms, dramatic poems.” ~ Author and Poet, Robert Morgan

Words and Photos by Rebecca T. Dickinson

Note to Readers: Working to return to regular blog schedule this week. Thurspiration will return. Apologies work, toddler and family have kept this blogger busy.

When We Write Letters, Part VIII: Letter to Mom

10-6-12 Canon Download 513

Dear Mom,

Will you walk with me for a few minutes in the garden?



Photos taken on my father-in-law’s farm late last summer where many beautiful plants and trees grow.

I think of you walking with me in the garden. Instead of shopping for dresses, we will look at ripples in the river. Don’t you see them dancing there? The goose took off, and his wings tapped the water.

You walk with me, though you don’t know it. When I find my peace beneath the trees next to the Catawba or when I am lost in the Blue Ridge Mountains, you go with me.

I wish we’d traveled together when I drove above the mountains in mid-winter. You could not tell wood from mountain side in mist so white.

You have asked me to go shopping so many times or for a bite to eat.

I did not go.

Now guilt burns.

You see, Mom, I live with you. I could not take money from you. My loving mother, you would not see it that way for you love and give in the way you can.

For now you cannot walk with me to see the trees blooming. Yes, Mom, I wish you could see the dogwoods blossom near the Greenway. Soon the bees will be shopping for honey.


You wished I would go to lunch when I put on my apron. The flour was poured into the mixing bowl.

“When will I spend time with you?”

“Here I am. We could cook,” I said.

A few days later you lie in your hospital bed. You and I, different women we are. Let us find a new way to live as mother and daughter. Until then, remember I think of you always when I wander between the trees and beyond the river.

I ended the When Write Letter Series a few weeks ago, but after my mother went to the hospital Saturday morning I changed my mind. One more was needed. You will notice this post and Thursday’s Thurspiration are connected. Thank you, readers, for your constant support!

Words and Photos by Rebecca T. Dickinson

InspireMe: Where You Find Your Story


The house settled by the Ogle family in the Great Smokey Mountains near Gatlinburg, Tenn.

How will you create your place?

Where is it located?



How often have you traveled there or visited this place in your imagination?

Do you miss it when you go?


A downtown view of Gatlinburg, Tenn.

The truth is that the place does not belong to you. The place you write houses your characters.


Who are they?


Do they fall in love?

Do they face prejudice because they are from different ethnic or religious backgrounds?


Does one character enjoy science fiction and the other art?


You write their ending, but they do not belong to you.

Whenever I have thought of place, I look at art. There is a lot a writer can learn from photographers and painters. Since being a writer is about perfecting your craft, I think the education extends outside the boundaries of literature. As you might have noticed, I am a visual learner.


Just as I enjoy authors who write visually; for example, Joshilyn Jackson and Pat Conroy, I also look for artwork that moves and teaches me about place and character.


Where do you find inspiration?

Photos and Words by Rebecca T. Dickinson

Get Lost Sometimes

“Love, I get so lost sometimes. Days pass and this emptiness fills my heart.



When I want to run away, I drive off in my car.


But whichever way I go

I come back to the place you are.

… In your eyes, I see the doorway to a thousand churches.


In your eyes, the resolution of all the fruitless searches

In your eyes, I see the light and the heat.” Peter Gabriel, In Your Eyes


When I first listened to Gabriel’s song years ago, I was not sure what kind of love he was writing about. Just as a reader looks deep into a good book, I do the same with lyrics.


The song came on the radio today. I realized the song could be about a relationship that has lasted beyond the first flames of a relationship. It is one that has grown up a little; one in which you have to walk away from stress. But, you come back and realize how much you do love that person.

John, my husband, has shared me with writing. It tests his patience. Sometimes he does not understand why I need to jot or edit a scene at a certain time. This song reminds me how important writers’ significant others are in life.

Some days John needs to drive off and he returns. We laugh, smile and I put down the pen.


Dedicated to Writers’ boyfriends, girlfriends, husbands and wives

Photos by Rebecca T. Dickinson

When We Write Letters Part V: After You Get Your Foot in the Door

A man walks around the center of a town.

The county courthouse sits at the center. The statue of a war hero is in front.

He lives in a warm place most of the year. Sunshine and 61 degree weather becomes old to him.

He waits for something new to come along because he needs it before he loses his home.

But, the jobs have left the factories in this town where he walks. Since clothes are bought overseas, no one needs materials from an American factory anymore. The man saw the last days of the mills just as a cowboy was a part of the last exploration of a cattle drive not interrupted by land claims.

What does the man need?

He needs it to snow one day after the temperature spiked to 61 degrees in February. Warm weather in a South Carolina winter does not surprise him, but one foot on the ground sure would.


Guess what?

It will snow.


The time will come when the weather changes and when a job opportunity sits on the table.

What do you do when you walk through the door?

As I watched in a job video Friday with a class, you think of it as a meeting. If you constantly build pressure in your mind to think: This is it. I must do well, you will drive yourself nuts. You know you’re right for the job.


What are your strengths in your last jobs? Even if you were fired or laid off, you know there is something good about you.

You’re not going to think the same way you once did. You’re going to remember why you were ever employed in the first place. That is because someone saw something in you.

If you have not had a job in a year or more – many haven’t – do not worry. Consider projects you’ve done, such as building a roof on top of a market or volunteer work. You might have taken a career class at a nearby college. Use what you learned.

Do not make a list of your personality traits. This is a tip I’ve heard and read everywhere. You want to say, “I am experienced and loyal,” but it will follow the same script someone else said before.

As you discuss your work experience, remember your strengths. Get a feel for the employer. Trust me this is important, and you will learn throughout the process.


My father’s flower bush has been blooming because of the warm weather.


There was a job I wanted last spring as a copywriter. A new company grew out of the owners’ house. When I went, I wore a dress pants and a blazer. The employer wore khakis and a tank top. She informed me she sent the dogs away because she realized it was inappropriate to have them during an interview.

Everything went smooth until the moment I mentioned my son. I do not remember how it came up, but I know it was in passing. If you are a mother, the toughest thing to remember is do not mention the fact you have children.

“None of us here have children so that would be different,” she said.


The one tree that still has leaves.

She also said I’d hear back one week after I sent in my samples. I waited eagerly and I heard nothing after I sent in my samples. She said, “The position has been filled, but we’ll keep your resume on file for future reference.”

That’s a company’s way –most of the time – of saying, “We don’t want you.”

While I will never know if my writing was to the company’s taste, I knew the difference in the interview before the topic of my son and after.

Take your time when you speak. Do not rush through what you want to say.

Inhale, exhale …


The snow is falling.

It is beautiful.

You have hope.

Words and Photos by Rebecca T. Dickinson

Two more When We Write Letters Left. Come back next week for Grandma’s Letters.

Write Big, Use Small Words: Best Love Ever

Look on your Valentine’s Day Candy.

What words do you read?

Are they long or short?

Does your candy say: Indulge My Passion or Flirtatiously Yours?

Sometimes you need no words at all to say, “I love you.”

In June 2012, my husband, son and I moved out of our apartment after he lost his job. It was another heartbreaking challenge for us.

Not long after, a storm came.

It destroyed roofs and buildings, including the front part of our favorite fresh food market.


John, who is a builder and intelligent in structural design, found the material and went with my dad to put on the roof.



Now I’m old-fashioned in some ways.

I like a man who gets on top of a roof to work.

My husband did that. He worked with his great strength. In a time when we had little, he gave everything.



His work has withstood many more storms.

Words and Photos by Rebecca T. Dickinson

When We Write Letters, Part IV: A Mommy Scribbles Letter



My son next to the Catawba River in Jan. 2012

Dear Son:

Some say a mother who stays at home is the best.

They say she is better than all of the rest.

She is blessed her husband works

in a job that brings the check

to support her and the little ones.

 

 

Son, you hit and shout at your school.

You slapped a girl in the face,

and sat in the director’s office.

I found out at mid-day

when the text rang through to my phone.

 

 

I could not take you in the mornings.

I no longer give you your early snack.

Your one time stay-at-home mom

is not there to put you down for a nap.

 

 

Is that the reason why you react

to the children at your school?

Is that the reason my heart

breaks at the thought of you?

I hear those mothers preach.

I can see them in my sleep.

 

 

You are the reason I race home

51 mph in a 35 mph zone,

so I’m the one who takes you outside

and tells you of birds, colors, shapes and letters.

 

 

Do you recall us walking by the river:

The grayish bare trees where no one

could see us? I picked you up

and we counted the geese

as their wings dashed the water.

 

 

You guided me down the narrow path,

and took me to the ruined bridge

knocked down years and years ago.

We stood there longer than most

parents and their two-year-olds.



Both photos taken Feb. 2013.

The most difficult task as a writer, worker and parent is not a critique of your work. It comes in your doubt of yourself as a parent. When you write letters, sometimes you need to write one to yourself.

I believe strongly in motherhood. I believe all kinds mothers make great moms whether they are in charge of a company, a news woman, attending school, working part-time, a writer or they stay in the home.

Photos and Words by Rebecca T. Dickinson

Next week After You Get Your Foot in the Door will post.

Friday Night Writes: Who is the Baby No One Wanted?


Photo taken October 2012 by R.T. Dickinson outside Bamberg, SC of my father and son.

He was no one’s child. He was everyone’s child. Wrapped in his first blanket, the baby lay in a crib carved by the pastor. The man smiled. Eyes – the color of ashen storm clouds at dawn – stared at him.

“Can he see me?” the pastor asked his wife.

He ran his finger over the small, soft brown hand.

“Maybe, Eth,” replied his wife. “He’s a new baby. He’ll see things close to his face in a few days.”

“I bet he’ll be a smart boy.”

“Only time will tell,” said his wife as she pulled a needle through the collar of one of his work shirts.

Pastor Eth Benedict stood from his spot next to the crib. He looked at his wife. Lily May Benedict had not wanted this child. She had not wanted to move to the town in the valley near the Little Salkehatchie River. She had not wanted many things in her life with Eth.

 

Sample from The Unclaimed in the Red Loam Stories

Photos and Words by R.T. Dickinson

© 2006-2013 by R.T. Dickinson. All rights reserved. No part of The Unclaimed, Sons of the Edisto, Red Loam stories, manuscripts or related material may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise, without prior written permission of R.T. Dickinson.



When We Look

Beyond the leafless trees, you might recall …


the path to the mountain top.

You know somewhere in your mind the map remains.


You’ll remember the way and the stories.





Photos and Words by Rebecca T. Dickinson

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