Kevin Flood Accessiblbe Trail, Amherst MA Featured Photo for February - 2015 Head in the Clouds Amherst Calendar Photo by Sharon Vardatira |
The human tendency towards “apophenia” – the drive to seek
patterns in random information – is what may have led my co-worker to make a
connection between the February 2015 calendar photo and the weather outside. Of
course, it doesn’t take a great leap to connect photos of different seasons
with weather typical for that season. Anyone looking at our calendar will
immediately grasp that each photo depicts winter, spring, summer, or fall – and
has been placed in a month that aligns with that season.
And still, even when we know the science, or logic, or sheer randomness of certain occurrences, many of us still seek out the deeper meaning and hidden connections. How many of us get a new calendar and immediately flip to our birthday or an anniversary to see what insight can be gleaned from a photo or quote? Or maybe you’re one of those people who refuses to look ahead so as not to jinx your special day. As objects that both look into the future and speak to our past, calendars have fascinated people for thousands of years. From inspiring supposed ancient Mayan doomsday prophesies to YouTube videos on “how to predict the future using any calendar at all,” calendars of all shapes and sizes can take on a life of their own. Even, apparently, our own Head in the Clouds Amherst calendar.
Statue of Robert Frost with Mask Amherst College, May 2020 Photo by Sharon Vardatira |
The March photo in our 2020 calendar, by Annie
Tvetenstrand, will go down in Head in the Clouds Amherst yore as eerily
prophetic. The scene, familiar to anyone who visits Puffer’s Pond in the
winter, showed a frozen pond under an overcast sky, with a large branch half submerged
beneath the ice and frozen on the surface. Annie’s comment below the photo
beautifully captured that singular demarcation between winter and spring:
While walking around Puffer’s, I noticed a twisted branch suspended on top of the pond’s thin surface of ice. It was waiting for spring, awkwardly trapped by the rigidity of winter, just like me.
The Edge of Spring ~ Puffer's Pond, North Amherst
Featured photo for March, by Annie Tvetenstrand
2020 Head in the Clouds Amherst Calendar
March 2020 seemed to last forever. And every single time I looked at the calendar, that branch trapped in the ice hauntingly mirrored the physical reality we were all collectively experiencing, with the overcast sky making sure no sun would penetrate the surface.
I remarked on the parallels to
no one until I learned, a few months later, that Annie herself not only shared
my perception, but she actually harbored some small worry that her photo was
somehow responsible for everything that had befallen our world in March. Okay,
I am probably overstating her feelings (Annie is, after all, a sane, smart
individual, firmly rooted in science). But sometimes the connections between
random occurrences, objects, or pictures are just too strong to deny, even when
we know better.
A calendar is that place where images and events we project
into the future intersect with time. So it’s really no wonder that calendars
have long been associated with prophesy and a touch of magic. And while I don’t
for a second believe our photographers have the power to bring down the snow or
set off a pandemic, could we unknowingly tap into some vast prophetic force?
Featured Photo for June 2021 Heads in the Clouds Amherst Calendar Photo by Mindy Domb |
Thank you for traveling with our Head in the Clouds Amherst
community. We look forward to opening the calendar for 2021, and finding new
ways for all of us to share our love of the sky and clouds, nature and weather,
and all those places, locally and more distant, that take our breath away.
You can view and purchase our Head in the Clouds calendar at Hastings (across from the Amherst Common) and online though Etsy for delivery by mail: https://etsy.me/2GSujYK .
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