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    <title>camouflagedoors' Journals on Buzznet</title>
    <description><![CDATA[If for some reason someone handed me a loot of cash, I'd stop everything and travel the world with my wife and a few good friends/family. And I'd of course be snapping pictures the whole time. But the odds are that all of you will be to cheap to fund my expedition, so I'll just have to resort to taking lunch money from little kids and selling fake life insurance to family pets to fund my travels. 

Things you should know:
1. I'm a lover, not a fighter.
2. Big landscapes make me gawk. 
3. Camping is fun.
4. I love to listen to music, and I try really hard to play it.
5. I love my wife.
6. My wife puts up with me.
7. I met Layne Staley's mom.
8. I am not related to George W. Bush.
9. I love ice hockey, and it loves me back.
10. I see deaf people. You do too. Learn to sign and meet one, Coolio.
11. Waterfalls are overrated.
12. I love the YMCA. 
13. My neighbor is a raving paint-balling moron (he shot my tree).
14. Waterfalls are awesome. 
15. You rock!]]></description>
    <link>http://camouflagedoors.buzznet.com/user/journal/</link>
    <language>en-us</language>
		    <item>
	      <title><![CDATA[Why I Do This]]></title>
	      <link>http://camouflagedoors.buzznet.com/user/journal/12315/</link>
	      <description><![CDATA[<P>Photography is the only art of mine that is bred from my own set of rules and standards. I’m a musician, and I play by note structures that others have defined. When I write I do so by obeying, or at least attempting to obey, rules of grammar and punctuation that others have defined. When I design layouts for print or Web, I always keep in mind that I must do so with the intended audiences perspective in mind. But photography is something that, unless done for a particular project, there are no rules or limits for me that others set. Call it selfishness, greed, callousness if you will. I call it none of these. I’m only taking for myself in the moment. And if my sharing what I’ve seen, or altering images to show them how I see them, doesn’t suit others rules or limitations, it doesn’t change how I will continue to take or alter my photographs in the future. That’s not to say that my style is not largely influenced by every photographer, famous or not, whose photographs I’ve seen or every other kind of artists’ works that I’ve loved or hated. That’s not to say that if one person today shows disgust in a particular aspect of my style, I will not consider the possible flawed nature of this detail. What I mean is that I am the rule setter, the rule breaker, the eye, the shutter, film, the pixels, and the paper in the moment before I hear “click.” </P>]]></description>
		  		  	<category>art</category>
		  		  	<category>photography</category>
		  		  <category>Buzznet</category>
	      <dc:creator>camouflagedoors</dc:creator>
	      <dc:date>2006-02-18T21:43:48Z</dc:date>
	    </item>
		    <item>
	      <title><![CDATA[Midwest Gallery]]></title>
	      <link>http://camouflagedoors.buzznet.com/user/journal/12313/</link>
	      <description><![CDATA[<p>"Writers in our own century, hunting as always for metaphors that will stick in the mind, have called it the Midlands, the Middle Border, the Corn Belt, the Breadbasket, the Inland Sea, the Great Valley, the Heartland, the Hear of the Country. Whatever the name, this is my home region."&nbsp; Scott Russell Sanders</p>  <p>My "The Midwest" photo gallery will be photos that I'm taking since moving back to Indiana after a long stint in Washington and a year in the Carolinas. You'll notice a lot of quotes from the Indiana native Scott Russell Sanders accompanying my pictures. Sanders is one of the most brilliant American writers and certainly one of the best to reside in this region. Coming from the Ohio River Valley himself, he is able to capture the soul of this region, its past, present, and the likelihood of its future if we don't love our land more than we are now.</p>  <p><span style="font-size: 12pt; font-family: 'Times New Roman';">Sanders' words are moving in a conservationist tone, but his honesty to our human limitations, rings through in essays that plead for change while not coming across as overly preachy. I know now, even though I’ve not been back very long, I will be capturing many images that question our mistreatment of the land in this region. I would like my pictures to mirror the voice of Sanders when they point out this way of trashing resources. I want to plead for change but not preach, not condemn. Recognizing that all litter is not deliberate, all carelessness is not calculated, I’d like to ask everyone (myself included) if this is the standard by which we want to live by.</span></p>]]></description>
		  		  	<category>conservation</category>
		  		  	<category>midwest</category>
		  		  	<category>scott russell sanders</category>
		  		  <category>Buzznet</category>
	      <dc:creator>camouflagedoors</dc:creator>
	      <dc:date>2006-02-18T21:28:00Z</dc:date>
	    </item>
		    <item>
	      <title><![CDATA[You Will Be Born]]></title>
	      <link>http://camouflagedoors.buzznet.com/user/journal/10846/</link>
	      <description><![CDATA[You will be born. You will suffer in the process, cold, wet, and naked
to an unfamilar world, to the room that you have just opened your eyes
to, having left the comfort of the only home you ever knew (your
mother's womb). And they will cut you from her. Them, with masks on,
drowning you with air and lights. They will snip your connection to
her. <br>
&nbsp;&nbsp; Immediately you see that she is suffering to. She may even
have endured as much as you, but you're not sure. You're only searching
for a way back, for some kind of shelter, for a way back to the comfort
that you have known inside your shell. <br>
&nbsp;&nbsp; For so long, all you knew was internal. Your mind, your
body was inside. Only murmurs of this and that, some unintelligible
noise disturbing or comforting you. Otherwise alone. There was safety
in being alone. You are not alone. Not anymore.&nbsp;&nbsp; <br>
&nbsp;&nbsp; The one you were cut from, came out of, are crying with,
is reaching out to you. So far away. But their reach is so far away and
you are helpless, flailing limply in the clutch of this strange masked
person with cold and dry hands, holding you out. But now you are being
moved across the room toward these outstretched hands of the one you
came from. This one must know how to send you back to where you came
from. They can put you back. But instead, they take you in their
clutch. But they, not masked like the others, look at you with eyes so
full of . . . fear, and wonder, and love . . . that for a moment you
feel almost warm, sheltered, and safe again. <br>
&nbsp;&nbsp; Time passes and she never puts you back. In fact, the more
time passes, the more you want to venture out and the more she lets go
of you. Soon, you start to go so far that you shelter yourselt. You've
found warmth in one thing or the other, or nothing at all, but you
don't need her, you think. You're fine on your own. Except you aren't.
You suffer. You suffer in new ways all the time so that you can never
build a tolerance to the pain. But there is also comfort. There is
pain, but the comfort you find is more rich, more powerful than
anything you have felt before. So powerful that you suffer in wanting
it so badly. So powerful that it sticks with you. Even in the end, it
is there.<br>
&nbsp;&nbsp; Again, the masked people surround you as you lay in this
unfamiliar place. Cold and naked, you look for outstretched arms, but
they are not here. No one is here. Not even the masked people, for they
left sometime while you were coming in and out of conciousness,
awareness. Only machines murmur some intelligible noise, disturbing or
comforting you. You cry, once again, tears of sadness and tears of joy.
Sadness for the comfort you leave behind, joy for the pain that is
almost over. <br>
&nbsp;&nbsp; You close your eyes and slip into a home you have never
known (a tomb). And just as they have covered you in complete darkness,
you feel a familiar touch of someone welcoming you to a new and
unfamiliar world, the place you have just opened your eyes to. You are
drowned by air and lights, colors and sounds, comfort and love. No
tomb, no womb, but a place where all born connected to everything. All
is one. All is comfort. All is love.<br>


]]></description>
		  		  	<category>birth</category>
		  		  	<category>rebirth</category>
		  		  <category>Buzznet</category>
	      <dc:creator>camouflagedoors</dc:creator>
	      <dc:date>2006-01-27T20:03:47Z</dc:date>
	    </item>
		    <item>
	      <title><![CDATA[Why Write?]]></title>
	      <link>http://camouflagedoors.buzznet.com/user/journal/10135/</link>
	      <description><![CDATA[<P>I went stomping through the quiet and lifeless, even leafless, winter forest early today when I had the urge to write something persuasive, something irresistable, so that all sad and sheltered Hoosiers may see 250-foot-tall trees and know that everything is going to be okay now. If you've seen 250-foot-tall trees, then you know what I mean when I say comfort. If you have,&nbsp;but you don't, then&nbsp;please look again and think of the word. Comfort. Say it out loud if necessary. </P>
<P>Look. Outside. What are your trees like? Every region can be defined by this. Not by some naturalist or poet or politician, but by the trees themselves. They define you. Your environment, your mood, your life. It all branches from, stems from, has roots in, grows in, flourishes when, dies when, and that's why I say again, look. Outside. At your trees. At your life.</P>]]></description>
		  		  <category>Buzznet</category>
	      <dc:creator>camouflagedoors</dc:creator>
	      <dc:date>2006-01-16T22:44:00Z</dc:date>
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