The heat and the relentless light of the sun makes it official. It’s summer at the Falls of the Ohio. Now I need to plan my forays a bit more carefully if I want to get the most from each trip out here. Earlier in the day is better. You miss most of the heat, there are fewer people (except for the die-hard fishermen) and the chances are better you might see some wildlife…especially birds. Luckily, if you don’t make it out here early enough…the trees are all in full leaf and the shade provides needed relief. I wonder what kind of summer is boding for this year? So far we have had the warmest spring ever being nearly a full seven degrees above normal temperatures. Yikes!! No doubt, summer will find a way to be memorable. Anyway, when I’m out here I try to take some precautions in the form of drinking water and sun block. Once my mind engages on something…I tend to forget my body. This post is about another “personality” that I ran into on this day and the following is his story.
I came across this fellow several times during this day. The usual protocol when encountering a stranger is maybe a quick nod of the head and each party then goes their own way. I would have been happy to stick with this, but I kept bumping into this guy seemingly everywhere I walked. One very curious thing about him (or her and how do you tell?) was that “he” was picking up old shoe soles and sticking them under his belt. Here’s another view showing this.
Truthfully, I was at a loss to explain this to myself and the best I could come up with for this strange behavior was that this guy forgot his collecting bag and had some type of project that required shoe soles? I’ve already noticed that a lot of wayward shoes wind up here courtesy of the Ohio River. If you don’t believe me, check out my special collections area under “The Shoes You Lose” and you will doubt no more! I haven’t added images to either collection in a while, nevertheless the lost shoes keep on coming. Just for kicks, here are a couple additional shoes I saw on this trip that piqued my camera’s interest.
Here’s another shoe found near the previous one. See what I mean? I could go on and on about the shoes alone.
After my first encounter with this odd character I ran into him near a willow tree by the river’s edge and he was doing the same activity as before.
This time I abandoned my typical reserve and engaged the guy in conversation. I think I said something like,…”Hey mister, I can’t help noticing that you are collecting shoes and shoe soles and although I know it is none of my business…what are you going to do with the footwear?” I further added, ” I see you have tucked a few more soles into your belt since I saw you earlier.” The Sole Man (my mental designation for him) smiled easily from his green mouth and put me at ease. I had nothing to fear from him. We walked together for a while and he told me what his angle is and why he does what he does. Spotting another lost sole in the sand, my new friend bent over and lifted it up.
Upon picking the sole up, the “Sole Man” flung it over his shoulder and said follow me.
We didn’t need to walk far. The Sole Man had a spot in mind where he told me he was going to deposit his shoes. In the full light of the sun he selected an area marked by two shattered plastic drums, driftwood, plastic junk, and the tell-tale white beads from Styrofoam that had been deposited here by the Ohio River.
One by one my new acquaintance dropped his shoe soles in his selected spot.
He told me that he does this as a form of meditation. Seeing all the junk from our material culture wash up here at the Falls of the Ohio has bothered him for years. He couldn’t understand why anybody would do this to the Earth? Fixating on all the debris was just making him madder and angrier which has its own consequences. He carried these shoe soles here because he wanted it to be visible so that others might see and reflect as he had.
He hit upon the idea that collecting and carrying these soles might provide him some peace of mind or insight into his fellow beings? Each sole was a record of a lived life with their scuff marks and pressure points compressed into the very sole itself. The sole was a record of an individual’s life experience and no two souls were bound to be alike. The old adage about not knowing a person until you walked in their shoes hit home like never before. I asked him was it working…making him less angry? He said that it did. His negative feelings were replaced with something akin to empathy for he understood that he was not much different from the former owners of these shoes. It made him feel less “high and mighty” and more of an equal stakeholder for the many conversations to come. After a few more photographs, I bid my new friend good luck. Leaving him, I placed one foot in front of the other and headed for home on this hot day.
Great post! 🙂
I’ve really enjoyed keeping up with your blog over the last 6 months or so! So much so that I mentioned your blog in my recent post for The Versatile Blogger Award! Cheers!
http://artfulexplorationsinnature.wordpress.com/2012/06/10/versatile-blogger-award/
Thank you Tara…your students are lucky to have you as a teacher!
Thank you so much! I look forward to gaining more inspiration from reading blogs like yours!
Shoeless Jackson collects and saves lost souls. God Bless those who minister to the lost (and found). May we each remember that our footsteps leave a mark on the world for better or worse.
P.S.
There must be a lot of barefoot people nearby the Falls Of The Ohio.
I’m going back to my gardening now, though I think I will leave my farm boots behind and go barefoot for the “summer sensation” and in honor of our shoeless soulful friend.
Bernie
http://litterwithastorytotell.blogspot.com/
It feels good to go barefoot every now and then! “Shoeless Jackson” might of made a better name for this character. Thanks Bernie!
so others can see and reflect as he does insight in his fellow humans making him less angry as there is so much we can do better than just being angry and curs in words of right and wrong place a footstep upon a footstep by choosing an other direction
you made me think about that feeling angry does not prove anything or get any results so much better to show and reflect
a lovely story with souls soil soles and footsteps
Soul Man is so great!
The song words, “I’m a soul man” are still playing in my mind as I type this, Al. Oh yeah, ‘the anger’ issue—good point to raise.
Hope you’re staying ‘healthy’ in the heat. After my intense go round with it last summer I’m still not faring too well when it rises beyond 80. Yesterday it was at least a 100 with terrible humidity. Yikes. The bird ‘bath’ dish was nearly empty this morning. Nearly 3 inches of water GONE with the heat and the birds’ need. Interesting that my neighbors put out seed but NO water. The dish on the old children’s plastic picnic table is like the local bird – squirrel beach. LOL.
Take care!
I remember the time you had last year with the heat! When I saw the recent temps out west, I thought of you and hoped you were faring better. This week, Louisville is looking at a couple days of 103 degree heat. If that happens, that will be the all time record high for Kentucky during the month of June. It has been dry as a bone out here and it looks like this will be this summer’s pattern.
You are a kind soul to consider the birds. You are right…what they need now is water. The seed will be needed later especially if the drought takes out their wild food plants.