By Scott Shephard
People of a certain age (60s and 70s) will no doubt remember at least a few of the songs of The Moody Blues. Both the lyrics and the technical aspects of some of the recordings were pretty trippy. But some of the songs were powerfully simple. Consider these lyrics
Listen, hear the sound
The child awakes
Wonder all around
The child awakesNow in her life, she never must be lost
No thoughts must deceive her
In life she must trustWith the eyes of a child
You must come out and see
That your world's spinning 'round
And through life you will beA small part of a hope
Of a love that exists
In the eyes of a child you will see
It’s odd that I think of something I listened to almost 50 years ago when I look at this picture of our oldest granddaughter Glenyce. I can’t help wondering what she is thinking at the moment I captured this image. But I know her well enough to know that this look is “real.” I don’t see uncertainty or doubt. And I don’t see impatience or judgement. I see trust, innocence, patience and purity.
When I look at Glenyce here, I am reminded that if I would be a little less cynical and jaded, and more child-like, I would be a better person: “And through life you will be a small part of a hope of a love that exists in the eyes of a child you will see.”
Canon 5DIII 1/100sec f4.0 ISO 500