Chapter 1: Grief through the lens of Astrophotography

*** These are some of the first astrophotography shots I took that planted the seed for this passion to sprout. 

              Astrophotography came to me at a turning point in my life.  I was a special ed school teacher of 15 years and was losing a war with the school system advocating for a heavily impacted student. Watching the system take advantage of the most marginalized and vulnerable disabled students was a level of disgust I wasn’t prepared for in my teaching career and it was revealed in a slow process year after year of seeing one policy change after another- one neglected scenario after another.  This caused burnout and my departure from teaching was not me wiping out- it was actually me standing up- refusing to be part of a toxic system where I was seeing such a bypassing of rights and ethics.

My choice to resign came with a ferocious combat between myself and the school district with attorneys, union advocates, and a lot of therapy. “Do what makes you feel happiest” one of my therapists told me, “that’s how you re-wire your brain” yet it felt selfish and unproductive to spend my days snowboarding then stargazing.  But that’s what I did.  I spent as many days and nights as I could carving new pathways with my snowboard, and my brain and my nights were usually spent alone near a mountain top contemplating and creating.  The long exposure of the camera taught me how to meditate.  The cold of the night taught me to hold a stretch and be present in my body. The concentration of composition and alignment taught me about the creative process and how to be in a flow state.  This process became about finding light in the dark- both literally and metaphorically.  Many nights were spent analyzing my significance, and perhaps more profound- my insignificance.  That we were all connected and part of a cosmic miracle, yet at the same time, what absorbs much of our inner world was insignificant in contrast to the vastness of the universe. 

Astrophotography became the most meaningful thing I did with my grief.  And it has been a tool to help me process the darkness ever since. Now over the years, astrophotography has taught me to process much more than grief, but for the purpose of this project, I am going to chart my own scenario’s of loss, grief and darkness in contrast with the art created from those moments.  This is a project that won’t ever end as we as humans will never stop having scenarios of loss and grief.  I hope some of the beauty captured in these moments will inspire others to find something tangible to do with their grief, as the light is always brighter in the dark.

error: Content is protected !!
Scroll to Top