a collection of thoughts, artwork and photos of a life all to short, but not insignificant.
...and
He Let Me Touch the Moon
He’d
throw his head back as he laughed, and he laughed often. The telling
of jokes was not a strong point, he’d laugh himself into near unconsciousness
before managing to spit out the punch line. He was never without
friends, something in this unassuming Dutchman put everyone at ease.
There are photos of him clowning on the parade grounds while he was a conscript
in the Dutch army. A devout pacifist, he’s reached an agreement to
be a medic and not have to shoot except in defense. He did enjoy
the shooting and was very good at it.
He was born in a small town outside Rotterdam, at the end of a long dijk with some of the most noteworthy windmills, the Kinderdijk. His father was a landlord, a faux painter and a musician. Not surprising that dad was an artist, scientist and inventor, it came with the genes. He attended art school as well as university to become a spectrographic analyst. His skills in art are well represented in this etching done in his early twenties. This tendency to master not one but many disciplines seems to repeat itself in me also. Judging from the family tree (back to 1402) we were never standard types with just one profession under our belts. There were a long line of clock akers, scientists, artists and pirates to name the most interesting ones. There were also the duller professions, the ones to make a living at, just in case, farmer, landlord, house painter. I like my father’s paintings best when the subject was his work in the lab. He took such a child-like passion for the work and this is reflected I n his paintings. His laboratories were his own kingdom, where the elements behaved themselves according to the laws of physics. Much preferable to world outside going out of control. I was fortunate to work alongside him as his assistant whe I was in my teens. It was the best possible place to get to know my father and see hi m at his passionate best. He had me every bit as excited about every sample burning is a graphite holder cautiously placed in a great big spectrographic machine. By fifteen I was expert at preparing samples and had the steadiest of hands. Little by little I was able to use most of the machinery in his lab with a good level of competence. One
cold autumn day, when I was about 16 I was summoned to the lab by my very
excited father. I practically ran the five blocks to the basement
lab on Queen’s university campus. My father, grinning like a cheshire
cat held out a bit of rock ruble. “Go ahead, said he “Touch the moon”.
Wow, I got to touch the moon." My father had been chosen as one of
the scientists to analyze the samples brought back from the moon by the
Apollo astronauts. This teenager was jumping out of her skin.
How many can say they've touched the moon?
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