Mental Captures! Get Those Thoughts Before They Get Away!

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Capture Those Mental Images!

Those fleeting images you get in your mind, in your imagination, in your dreams, in your experiences... do they whoosh off and disappear? Or, have you been able to capture these images?

These mental images are moments of time. If you don't capture them, they whoosh off and are gone forever.  Sure, if you have committed them to memory, you may be able to retrieve enough of those mental images to recreate them with words or art. However, for mental images associated with moments of your experience in real-life and "real-time", you may need to capture these images with an instantaneous capture method.

There are many ways you can capture your mental images. The mental images that exist only in your head as your imagination or dreams obviously must be captured in your words or your art (and maybe a little in photography, if you have the technical skills and creativity to play with exposures and settings and subjects).

Mental images that are based on your experience can be captured by your words, your art, or your photography.

Help With Capturing Those Mental Images Through Photography!

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Sailing As If In A Dream--A Captured Mental Image!

Sometimes, when the scene and setting is just right, and you are prepared with a camera that has film in it and the lens cap is off, and your batteries are good, and the wind is just right, and all the planets are aligned... well, you get the idea!

Capturing a moment in time through photography has always fascinated me. For the brief moment that the camera's shutter was open--sometimes for as little as 1500th of a second--electromagnetic radiation in the form of reflected and generated light waves entered the camera and exposed the film or generated a digital signal to produce a captured image. This image has captured those light waves as they were at that brief moment. And now, through reproducing the results of that capture, others, including you can also see that same moment--as if it were frozen in time (it was, in certain respects).

When you see that delicious moment captured in the way that I saw it, you can experience a tiny bit of what I was experiencing that day when I took the picture. By adding words to describe the smell of the ocean spray wafting over the deck of our sailboat, the warmth of the sun on our skin, the coolness of the breeze trying to lift off our hats, and the cries of the sea-gulls overhead, I can try to make the moment of that picture come alive. You'll be able to visualize the experience with your senses--your sense of smell, touch, hearing, and sight. This is now a bit of your mental image as well.
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Capture Those Mental Images! With Words!

Early morning dandelion ready to release seeds - Captured moment in timeMany folks use words to capture the mental images that occur to them in dreams or in their imaginations or while experiencing life. In prehistoric times, these words were only spoken words. Sometimes the story would get grander and grander and more exagerated with each telling until it became the stuff of legends. This was how stories passed on from generation to generation for many thousands of years. Storytelling became an art form of itself.

Then, writing was developed. Whether in the hieroglyphics of Egypt or the calligraphy and characters of China, whether in the Hebrew script of the torah or the cunieform of Babylon. These writings captured moments of time--that, of course of the person who captured the text on the medium whether stone, clay tablet, papyrus, or parchment and of the mental image of the event, in addition to the event itself.

After paper became readily available, you could write notes to yourself (and whoever might later read it) in your journal--either as loose pages kept in a box, or a bound book. Journals have now advanced such that you can get professionally and attractively bound volumes at almost any large bookstore such as Barnes & Noble or Borders. Some of these journals are considered "sketch-books"--that have no lines and thus are better suited for drawings. Others are the formal journals that have blank, lined pages.

You can also keep a daily journal in an every-day 3-ring binder on lined notepaper. Or, keep a journal ("Doogie-Howser" style) by making a daily entry on your computer--whether on notepad or MS-Word or in Yahoo's Calendar or notepad function.

Although it might not seem like much when you first start keeping a daily record of things... over the years, this can turn into a valuable capture of historical moments and interesting events that you may have forgotten if you hadn't captured them otherwise.

These notes can be the seeds for novels or memoirs, poems or musical lyrics. It only takes a while for them to "compost" for a while before they take on a life of their own and become a valuable addition to your "mental image storehouse."

What do you capture? Everything and anything that strikes your fancy. Descriptions of people, places, events. Your thoughts. Jokes. Humor. Sadness. Whatever. If it's in your head, you can get it on paper.

Capture Those Mental Images! With Photography!

After you've gained experience enough with your camera, scenes start appearing to you. With skill, and your camera, you can capture those mental images that only you can see.

An Imperial Palace now a Cultural Museum, TaiwanSometimes it's the ordinary things that strike your fancy such that you can see a different angle or perspective that most folks wouldn't think of. If you can capture this different angle of things that folks take for granted, you can produce a unique, interesting, and thought-provoking image.

Other times, you'll find yourself in an exotic location. As an individual, you'll have a unique perspective on what you are seeing and experiencing. When you capture your experience through your camera, the image catches that moment in time such that no-one else would have that same moment.

Later (many years later, perhaps), these images can be useful in stimulating memories, for rejuvenating those mental images. From these images you may be more able to come up with the words and art to accompany or better express your mental image.

I've put up many of my images (not that many, really) on CafePress for others to enjoy on gifts and goodies. You can see them at my Squidoo site, Images By Dave.

Drop on by and visit. Browse through the images--check out each of the accompanying online "stores". On the other hand, you can visit Cafe Press through my CafePress offerings... and create Your Own CafePress offerings of your mental images!

Go ahead and play!

Capture Your Own Mental Images Through Photography

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Capture Those Mental Images! With Art!

A field of daisies - ideas popping up everywhere - captured in a moment of time on a piece of filmA piece of canvas, a sheet of paper, a chunk of wood. Combine these with a some tubes of oil paint, some water colors, or some chalk, and you can capture the images in your head and express them.

Although it's nice to have an easel with a side table to hold your painting or drawing tools, you can usually manage with a kitchen table and the tools conveniently sitting next to your canvas or drawing paper.

You can take formal painting and drawing classes at your local community college or through your town's adult education programs or through private instructors. But, sometimes, you can also start to capture your mental images even before learning how to improve on them. It may depend on what and how you want to express what your mind is seeing.

Paintings--Images of Captured Moments

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More Mental Images Captured...

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Mental Captures In Nature Are Just Waiting For You To Snag!

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Need a journal in which to jot down your mental captures?

Or, how about some greeting cards to send your mental captures to someone else? Or a bag to carry your mental captures! Check these out!

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Create your own Squidoo lens collection by starting here!

Just click on the icon below -- it's easy, it's fast, and best of all, it's FUN!

Squid graphic courtesy of Squidoo Squid Graphics For Your Lenses! by GreekGeek.

Make a Mental Note To Drop a Note Here!

  • MaxReily Feb 19, 2011 @ 8:18 am | delete
    I'm hopeless at painting, and almost hopeless at photography, but I do like to think I can write fairly well. I've always wanted to start a journal, but somehow, I never have. The idea of doing it "Doogie Howser's Way" never occurred to me, for some reason. I think I'll try making a "sign off" at the end of each day with the things that I want to remember from that day! Thanks for a great lens!
  • Tobbie Sep 25, 2010 @ 5:54 am | delete
    I keep saying that I am going start journaling. maybe I should write it down as a daily reminder. You've inspired me. Cheers!
  • JaguarJulie Aug 6, 2009 @ 3:41 pm | delete
    You know lately because of too much information I fear, I have had such mental images that I can't begin to tell ya!
  • tandemonimom Apr 25, 2009 @ 7:30 pm | delete
    Very original lens! 5*
  • Margo_Arrowsmith Aug 6, 2008 @ 5:23 am | delete
    I love the way that you put these simple elements, something that we have all done, or at least all have access to, easily together to solve a common problem/bugaboo that impedes creativity.

    I am going to ad a link to this lens to my lens about using an easy poetry method to do the same. In fact, you have stimulated my creativity to add something else to my lens! Thanks.

    http://www.squidoo.com/victorhugopoetry
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