Binary Contradiction

Binary Contradiction

Binary Contradiction

Here are some binary contradictions of winter.

Since early in life we are thought to think in binaries, good vs bad. Then religion and other cultural elements continue to reiterate the idea of binaries. Our thinking in binaries reaches a point where we cannot start to imagine other alternatives and we have conceptual problems when ideas don’t fit in a binary.

One easy attempt to think outside binaries comes from including the middle grounds. The “maybes” and the “grays” are easy finds but still do not satisfy the appetite for alternates to binaries. A next step could be, the contradiction of binaries. For this, we need to know how do we define binaries?

Binaries have two requirements. They need to be two elements in opposition to each other. The “on” needs to have the “off” as a binary counterpart. This definition of binary gives a road map to create alternatives to binary thinking. The options are 1) to have more than two elements that oppose each other without having a third element to disrupt the “bi” prefix and 2) to contradict the opposition. I will work on the first part on a future post.  So let us talk about the second part of the definition.

A binary contradiction happens when you have a binary opposite, but in the opposite you find the original. One example of a binary opposition from life is beauty and ugliness and the binary contradiction would be when you find beauty in the ugliness.

For this series, I set out to find binary contradictions in the winter urban landscape. Drop a comment down in the section.

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Check out other posts: Un Par de Colochos, Piña a Colores y Before and After the Winter Snow

Before and After the Winter Snow

before and after winter snow

Before and After the Winter Snow

As winter starts to get serious I am preparing a few posts that reflect on the language we use to describe winter. The posts will reflect on our use the words pure, crystalline, mushy or bitter and how they conjure a feeling or a memory, and how we can flip from saying “Oh, how nice is the snow” to “Arg! it is snowing again”.

I took these photographs two months apart. I tried to stand in the same place and I think I was close. This was the first snowfall that accumulated in 2015 in Boulder, Colorado. The temperature was below 0° C.

By the time I decided to head back my fingers were starting to hurt. And I was beginning to worry that my camera was going to freeze since the ambient temperature was below the lower optimal working temperature. But, still I stopped to take a few more photographs.

These two photographs remind me of those then and now photos to which I am always attracted. The signs show a historical site back-in-the-day and now. Most of the time the picture from the past is in black and white and the picture in the future is in color. With this pair of photographs the past is shiny, full of color, and the present is bitter, bone-hurting, beautiful. And still one reminisces on the recent past.

Leave a comment below with your thoughts on winter. I am particularly interested in reading how you deal with the cold.

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Check out my other post: Diffusion, Me Di Un Vueltin, or Abstract Photography