Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2011/03/03

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Subject: [Leica] "Small Negatives, Big Prints"
From: richard at imagecraft.com (Richard Man)
Date: Thu, 3 Mar 2011 21:40:09 -0800

Just before I went to the Santa Fe Workshop, I got a really bad asthma
attack. Third times in ~8 years and finally have it diagnosed as such. My
wife was rather mad at me that I hit a whole bunch of triggers and didn't
realize it until too late that it got to be a full blown attack. Of course
Santa Fe being at 7000+ feet and cold, is rather bad for me as I am more
used to 70 ft above sea level and 70 degree days. That wasn't the worst of
it though. I took my inhalers and even a pot to cook the Chinese herbal
medicine with me, and the asthma was under control.

At the first day of the workshop, I took the Hassy+P30 back and 3 lens and a
heavy tripod, hiking uphill and all. I even told Bob Adler about it as he is
known to hike all over Yosemite with multiple Hassies and lens. For the next
4 days, I switched to the Leica M9 to give my body a break. At the last
morning of the workshop - the day when everyone else is wrapping things up
and saying goodbye, since we are the "Landscape Class," we met up at 5 AM to
hike up to the Bandelier National Monument to catch the sunrise, in sub-zero
temperature. By then, my lower left back is killing me already, but there is
a sunrise to catch and photos to take. Not sure exactly how I hiked up and
down too.

After the hike, we went to breakfast, and I couldn't quite move. It was bad.

I met my  wife at the airport later that day, and we spent a couple more
days together in New Mexico, playing with corgis and such, and just
generally tried not to further hurt myself. Popping iburprofen helped to
ease the inflamed ligament.

After we got home, my wife took the heavy weapons - the Chinese ointments
(Dit Da Jow and Tiger Balm), and massaged it and by next day the
inflammation has gotten way down, but the spine is still twisted.
Fortunately, I was able to get a short appointment with our body worker Dr.
Jim that evening and he straightened things up (literally) and now I can
walk again.

So what happened? After talking to Dr. Jim, we figured out what. The problem
is that this killing pain only shows up only once every 4-5 years and while
I knew that there may be some connections, I didn't think it through before:

16 years or so ago, when our daughter was a wee one, I was driving her to
preschool one day and a tire blew. I took out the spare tire and tried to
remove the dead tire. Now imagine this: I was crouching down and trying to
jerk the wrench up. I have since learned that it is FAR more efficient,
effective and LESS damaging to put the wrench handle on the other side and
stomp on it. In any case, I didn't at that time and I pulled up and I felt a
pop and.... instant mega lower back pain with inflamed ligament to boot. I'm
pretty sure I started to see Dr. Jim then for that exact problem.

Now imagine this last week, I was hiking up mountains, so I am bending
forward, carrying heavy camera equipments, plus a heavy duty tripod, in cold
weather. Yup, the posture is awfully similar to crouching down and weight
bearing load...

Of course being in a busy workshop and that I was working in the evening
(ah, the joy of having your own company), I didn't have time to get some
Motrin. Big mistake.

Many many lessons learned.

One of them is certainly Oskar Barnack legacy - small negatives, big prints.

-- 
// richard <http://www.imagecraft.com/>
// icc blog: <http://imagecraft.com/blog/>
// photo blog: <http://www.5pmlight.com>
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Replies: Reply from jhnichols at lighttube.net (Jim Nichols) ([Leica] "Small Negatives, Big Prints")
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