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Mike's Musings: Ansel Adams and the Coronavirus

“Our lives at times seem a study in contrast … love & hate, birth & death, right & wrong … everything seen in absolutes of black & white. Too often we are not aware that…

“Our lives at times seem a study in contrast … love & hate, birth & death, right & wrong … everything seen in absolutes of black & white. Too often we are not aware that it is the shades of grey that add depth & meaning to the starkness of those extremes.” – Ansel Adams

Ansel Adams (1902-1984) went to Yosemite National Park at 14 years old, where his parents gave him an Eastman Kodak No. 1 Brownie box camera. His love affair with his camera, as well as his father’s encouragement to live a “Ralph Waldo Emerson” life guided by a social responsibility to humans and nature, led to his advocacy for environmental conservation. 

As a youngster, Adams was dismissed from several private schools for being restless and inattentive. I can relate to being a poor fit for public education and am still amazed that I was able to survive high school and, thanks to Most Beautiful One (MBO), eventually graduate college. 

“Monolith” by Ansel Adams

Countless people have been able to experience the majesty of nature because of Adams’ patience and expertise with a camera. One biographer called “Monolith” Adams’ most significant photograph because the “extreme manipulation of tonal values” was a departure from all previous photography. 

Unaware of “tonal values,” I always thought of Adams as someone who saw the world in black and white. It didn’t occur to me until I started taking photos myself that he was in actuality a purveyor of the infinite shades of gray and the broad spectrum of light. This realization has driven some interesting observations about my own life.

One of MBO’s and my favorite places is Yosemite where Adams took many of his most notable photos. We first went there as teenagers in 1969 when we ran away from home together. We stayed there in a hippie campsite for a few weeks until hundreds of Hells Angels biked in, at which point we quickly (and wisely) departed. It was a much different (and saner) experience visiting there with our children many years later!

“I am very cautious of people who are absolutely right, especially when they are vehemently so.” ― Michael Palin of Monty Python

Adams contracted the 1918 Spanish Flu. He needed several weeks to recuperate. Being home during this current pandemic has caused me to further reflect on the significance of black and white and right and wrong. As a former executive coach, I had to train myself to be a good listener. But, even now, I have a tendency to internally cling to what I believe to be “right,” even when I appear to be listening. This applies to world issues as well as the most trivial matters. It’s difficult to have an open dialogue when I’ve already made up my mind!

Speaking of black and white, MBO’s and my views are not always the same. In other words, the “truth,” if there is one, often lies somewhere in between. By understanding this, we have learned to (eventually) appreciate each other’s perspective which, of course, has resulted in more harmony. Imagine what could be accomplished if politicians did the same.

Stay safe out there!

Other titles by Mike during Covid-19:

Pema Chodron and the Coronavirus

Helen Keller and the Coronavirus

Prince Hamlet and the Coronavirus

Davy Jones and the Coronavirus

Keb’ Mo’ and the Coronavirus

Harry Manx and the Coronavirus

Louise Penny and the Coronavirus


ABOUT MIKE LISAGOR – Mike Lisagor plays harmonica and sings in Good Karma Blues. He has written hundreds of magazine articles and blogs on a variety of business and Buddhist related topics. He is the author of “Romancing the Buddha,” which he adapted into a successful one-man show that he performed at Bainbridge Performing Arts and in Los Angeles and Washington D.C. His nature photographs have appeared in the Boston Globe, Bainbridge Island Magazine, Living Buddhism as well as in several local galleries. His latest graphic art project, “Reimagined Nature”, is in the lobby of New Motion Physical Therapy.