eftychia: Me in kilt and poofy shirt, facing away, playing acoustic guitar behind head (Default)
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posted by [personal profile] eftychia at 04:59pm on 2003-12-02

Friday I went to Darkover, using my mother's van. I didn't have money for a room, so the plan was to commute to the con. I took what I needed out of the van, played for dancing, put things back in the van, ran out for fast food with [livejournal.com profile] silmaril, came back to the convention, sorted out what was what and who was where and whether or not I needed to help pick up a bandmate who was stuck at a garage on the other side of the city, fetched what I needed for the Homespun Ceilidh Band concert out of the van, changed into my kilt, played our concert, watched Cliff Art perform, got into a cool conversation ... then, in the wee hours, I loaded up the van again to go home. But not everything that had been in there was still there.

Hotel security suggested I move the van from the parking lot to the little spot in front of the main door while I waited for the police to arrive. I got home a lot later than I thought I would.

Saturday I felt pretty wretched physically, and called in sick. Missing a performance I've committed to is a major bad thing for me, but I wasn't in any shape to drive. I figured I'd rest up and at least make it to the Regency ball and the rest of the convention, but when I felt well enough physically, I still couldn't cope emotionally. I stayed in bed. Sunday and Monday too. I'll try really hard to get to Thrir Venstri Foetr rehearsal tonight, but I'm not doing well.

I've got a lot to complain about lately, but I do try to make my complaints entertaining or at least insightful (not that I always manage that). This time I don't think I can muster either of those. This hurts too much.

The thief or thieves punched a hole in the passenger side door of my mother's van, just above the lock. Fortunately they didn't get my guitars (which were with me) or my recorders (which I'd forgotten at home), but they did get yet more of my 35mm camera gear. Worse, they got the bass krummhorn that I received about a month ago and had never even gotten a chance to use in a performance, the one willed to me by a friend who died of cancer earlier this year. (I had taken it to the dance on Friday, but none of the tunes had bass lines suited to the instrument. I had hoped to play it at the Regency dance on Saturday.) A beautiful instrument, an instrument there's no way I could have afforded on my own, a reminder of a dead friend, and something the thief probably won't have any idea what to do with ... gone.

Worst, two borrowed cameras that other people had trusted me with were taken. [livejournal.com profile] anniemal's box camera that she'd had for ages, and the borrowed 4x5 view camera. Again, something more expensive than I can afford, and in this case an important tool belonging to someone else. Stolen on my watch. In addition to all the hurt and discouragement, I haven't wanted to write because of the shame. I brought it to the convention because I had an idea for some shots that could really benefit from that large negative (though I was going to have to get a little experimental to deal with the flash); I didn't take it into the hotel because I was carrying so much stuff I wasn't sure I could watch everything adequately while I was on stage. I know better than to leave things in my car in my own neighbourhood (the camera bag stolen several months ago was taken while I was carrying stuff into the house), or to leave anything visible in a shopping center or mall parking lot this time of year, but I was out in quiet Timonium, in an area where there shouldn't have been any random passers-by to be tempted, and the van has tinted windows and everything was tucked down between the seats. Still, I took the camera out of my house, and it got stolen. And I am crushed. And I can't imagine how the onwer is going to feel.

I was really excited about the 4x5 camera. I had so many ideas for it. And I was looking forward to seeing how the two shots I hadn't gotten developed yet worked out (the first two were underexposed -- the next two were still in the camera bag). Now I won't know whether those shots worked, and I won't get the chance to try the other photos I had in my head.

I have had big plans for photography in general. I've shot a few weddings, made a lot of art, and was hoping to actually earn some money with my cameras. I just needed to learn how to market myself and my work, and to come up with money to prepare prints for a show. I've made it my practice to make sure I have a camera with me wherever I go, ever since I was in a grocery store that somebody set on fire, and didn't have a camera. And when I go to a festival or a convention, I carry a few cameras, different lenses, and flashes, because there's likely to be something interesting and I might want to use both colour and black-and-white, for example. I've added "and photographer" to the what-I-am/what-I-do part of my self-identification.

But the thefts have sucked the joy out of it. I'm seriously considering just giving up. Maybe even selling the camera gear I've got left to pay bills.

I feel like I can't win. I started with a camera and two lenses I couldn't really afford but managed to stretch for. Then I was given another camera and one lens. Then the first camera died (broke in a way that was not cost-effective to repair). Pawn shops and eBay provided the next few, which were 30+ years old and on their last legs, and some of those broke. Then I lucked into similarly old but better maintained gear. And some more modern (20 years old) equipment. Most of what I bought, I bought before my finances got as dire as they are now. And even then, every piece was a stretch. But what I bought was augmented by hand-me-downs, "found this in the attic and didn't know what else to do with it" surprises, and even significant gifts from near-strangers I met on the net, some of whom requested anonymity. While there were still significant gaps in my toolkit, I felt like I was on my way to assembling a robust, if not modern, set of gear to use for the kinds of photography I wanted to be doing.

My house was burgled in January 2001. In addition to the burglar alarm, the thieves got away with nearly all of my zoom lenses and my macro lens, some filters, filter adaptors, and assorted other small accessories. That hurt. I did manage to replace a couple of the zoom lenses, but have been shooting with primes a lot more since. In May 2003 my camera bag was taken from the trunk of my car as I was carrying things back into my house after Balticon, and they got two cameras, all of my filters, a borrowed autowinder, several more lenses (including zooms and a macro lens that were replacements for ones stolen in 2001), a flash, lots of film, and assorted small stuff. The range of types of shoots I could go on went way down at that point. Now I've lost two more 35mm cameras, the 3-D camera, the two borrowed cameras, yet more lenses, all but one tiny flash, a mess of film, and some important accessories. I no longer have a portrait lens, a nice flash, or a K-mount wide-angle lens. And I no longer have any hope.

Let's face it; it was miraculous that I'd gotten my hands on all that gear in the first place, what with the lucky pawn shop finds, the hand-me-downs, and the gifts. A fine use I've made of the gifts -- it's now like I feel I can go asking for more when a) they were random kindness to begin with, not something I "deserved" or an investment, and b) gee, I couldn't hold onto them very well, could I? And I have less money to play with now than I did before. I can't even afford developing -- I've got about 200 rolls of film waiting for the day I can afford to get them processed; other than two sheets of 4x5, the only film I've gotten developed recently have been rolls I shot for other people (who paid for the developing) and the roll I shot for the "found cat" signs when Perrine showed up. So what's the point anyhow? I keep seeing these cool images that I want to capture on film and show to others, but I can't afford to get the film processed, so it sits in my freezer indefinitely. And even with the pictures I've already made, I can't afford to get them printed in sizes suitable for hanging, so I can't even mount a show to try to sell them. I was supposed to have an exhibit at XandO coffeehouse up in Charles Village in September, but I was never able to pull together the money to make the prints. My big break that I was so excited about when it got scheduled never got to happen.

I want to throw something. I want to break something. I just have to make sure it's not something expensive.

So I guess it's time for me to return to the decade or so that I spent wandering around seeing things everywhere that looked like they needed to be made into photographs but not being able to do anything about it. Then it was because I had no camera at all; now it's because the pain of being robbed has sucked the joy out of the art -- every time I see a shot that would work better with a different lens, a lens I no longer have, I'm going to want to cry -- and because I can't afford to develop the film anyhow. Like I said, maybe I should sell my remaining gear and stop pretending I ever had any chance of becoming a real photographer.

And God forbid I ever leave my house with more stuff than I can comfortably carry on my person all day, ever again. Except maybe for travelling to Pennsic. Do I dare take two guitars, recorders, guitar-stands, sheet music, and a drum with me, even without the camera bag? My shoulders might get tired and I'd have to set something down. Maybe I should strip down to just the six-string, maybe the bag of recorders, and my purse when I leave the house from now on. Versatility is for people with roadies. I can't afford to be that much of an artist.

All of this ties into a larger frustration with how my life has been steadily going downhill over the past dozen years. Things break that I can't afford to fix; things wear out that I can't afford to replace; I've lost my health insurance and am about to lose auto and life insurance for not being able to pay the monthly premiums; I can no longer buy the painkillers I need to be able to function well enough to earn the little income I managed to earn before; I've entered the financial death-spiral I've feared for so long and seen myself on the edge of -- I haven't been on the edge, I've been afraid to admit I've fallen in. I'm doomed.

And it's getting very hard to get out of bed.

There are 66 comments over 2 pages. (Reply.)
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posted by [identity profile] patches023.livejournal.com at 06:44am on 2003-12-03
Maug and I are so sorry this happened. We add our hugs to everyone else's.

Several people mentioned that auto insurance might cover some of the damage. Your home owners insurance might also help. I had a friend who had his home owners insurance pay for some tools stolen from his car.

Love and hugs.
 
posted by [identity profile] dglenn.livejournal.com at 09:50pm on 2003-12-10
I'm still sorting out the insurance, but so far it looks like it falls in the cracks between different policies. :-( If it does turn out to be covered, it'll certainly exceed the deductible.
 
posted by [identity profile] filkerdave.livejournal.com at 07:33am on 2003-12-03
How incredibly sucky :(
 
posted by [identity profile] tovahs.livejournal.com at 02:45pm on 2003-12-03
Glenn,

I have a 35mm Cannon that has several lenses (including a macro lens) and filters that needs a new home. I haven't done much with it for over 3 years now. It can use a good cleaning and probably new batteries.

Call it a Holiday gift. Use it in good heath.
}{ugs
 
posted by [identity profile] dglenn.livejournal.com at 09:23pm on 2003-12-10
Thanks. And it'll be good to see you, too.
 
posted by [identity profile] silmaril.livejournal.com at 03:15pm on 2003-12-03
I've started putting out feelers for the krumhorn. I guess this is where descriptions could help---I know it was a bass, but what color/make/maybe size is it?
 
posted by [identity profile] dglenn.livejournal.com at 09:47pm on 2003-12-10
Thanks. I've responded in email, but I'll do so again here in case anybody coming into the thread late wants to spread the word...

It's very dark brown. There's no name on it, but there is a small shape that looks like it might be supposed to be a maple leaf, which I suspect is a maker's mark. It looks like the photo of the Moeck bass on the von Huene (http://www.vonhuene.com/moeck_crumhorns.cfm) web site. It's in a red cardboard case with a foam insert, such that the windcap, reed + staple, and main body of the instrument each have their own cutout in the foam. There's a sticker on the box with the name of a store in New England on it -- I'm pretty sure it was the New England Shop for Early Music (which is von Huene).
 
posted by [identity profile] aliza250.livejournal.com at 05:59pm on 2003-12-03
Ouch. I know I was furious enough to want to kill whoever ripped off the irreplaceable stuff from my car, and your loss is so very much worse.

I regret that I have nothing to offer except my sympathy. But don't let the scum of this world kill your art.
 
posted by [identity profile] dglenn.livejournal.com at 06:54pm on 2003-12-10
Even the sympathy helps some ... I've got stuff to write later on friends keeping me from giving up (beyond what I wrote yesterday).
 
posted by [identity profile] tikvah.livejournal.com at 06:59pm on 2003-12-03
That *totally* sucks. I wish I could do something to help. Unfortunately, my fibro makes travel a challenge. I do all right visiting my parents because my departure airport is a short drive from my house, the park-and-fly is pretty cheap, my parents fetch me from the airport near them, and my parents have clothes and foods and toiletries that I need so I needn't carry too much crap. Most other traveling is a bit more difficult for me. Otherwise, I'd volunteer to visit, drive you around, spot you a few dollars to cover some expenses, and help you purchase a few things until you get back on your feet.

You can e-mail me at tikvah at livejournal dot com if there is anything I _can_ do. I mean it.

After all, the primary difference between your circumstances and mine is luck, pure and simple.
 
posted by [identity profile] dglenn.livejournal.com at 06:47pm on 2003-12-10
Thanks. If I figure out what help to ask for, I will.

One of these days my luck has to improve, right?
 
posted by [identity profile] badgerthorazine.livejournal.com at 02:42am on 2003-12-04
Oh, Goddesses...that sucks so badly! :-( I'm so sorry to hear it! :-(
Do what you have to do, but damn, I don't want you to give up on the photography...but that's probably selfish of me, 'cuz the pics are so pretty.

The main thing right now is to take care of yourself...bubblebath, chocolate, whatever works for you.

And there's many more hugs when/if you need 'em. You know me, I'm hooked on hugs. ;-)
 
posted by [identity profile] dglenn.livejournal.com at 06:30pm on 2003-12-10
I mostly hid in bed and watched television and tried not to think much for a while. As a side effect, I finally got caught up on all the series I'd been taping recently (I was about two months behind at one point; a few weeks behind at Thanksgiving), and started in on some of the shows I'd taped early in 2001 (which is why I've recently seen episodes of The Lone Gunmen). Not exactly "taking care" of myself, but once in a while "running away" is useful to buy time to cope...

Gonna have to road-trip up your way for those hugs sometime soon.
 
posted by [identity profile] badgerthorazine.livejournal.com at 09:45pm on 2003-12-10
Totally understandable. :-) Escape is good too sometimes for a bit.
You're welcome up here anytime, dear. You know that! (Although I don't reccomend the levels of snow we have to anyone at the moment!;-)
Couch in living room makes a good bed, if you need crash space.
 
posted by [identity profile] bill-in-germany.livejournal.com at 09:19am on 2003-12-04
Please don't give up photography.

I don't blame you for the loss of the 4x5. I will send you information on replacement cost for the insurance claim, and check with my agent to see if I'm covered for the loss of my equipment.
 
posted by [identity profile] dglenn.livejournal.com at 06:25pm on 2003-12-10
I'm not giving up, thanks to lots of people. And I still want to do large-format sooner or later ... just maybe not with borrowed equipment next time. I do wish I could've seen how the two exposed sheets that were in the camera bag would've looked if I'd had a chance to get them developed.

The next time you're up here, remind me that I still have the film holder that wasn't in the camera bag, to return to you.
 
posted by (anonymous) at 10:33am on 2003-12-04
Dear Glenn,
Big hugs and lots of sympathy. The sad truth is that most of us at some time or another have dealt with crime -- theft and worse. It shakes your entire world view and any sense of safety you had. Still, these are but 'things' that were taken and though they may not be all be replaceable, in the great scheme of the world this will pass. Don't make any drastic decisions right now. Let time heal your soul.

And remember that a bass krummhorn will be a bitch to fence without someone noticing.

Blessed Be, mouse
 
posted by [identity profile] dglenn.livejournal.com at 06:16pm on 2003-12-10
Thanks. I think "don't make any drastic decisions right now" is the advice I most needed in the first week.

And yeah, I'm kind of hoping the krummhorn will be sufficiently conspicuous to lead to the rest.
 
posted by [identity profile] wolfdancer.livejournal.com at 12:16am on 2003-12-05
I SO understand what your going through! When My van was stolen with all of the thngs that I was atempting to build a new carere out of, it was the posable wors shock and devestation. I literyl had Thousands of dolars of things in there, all the things that If i were to run away from home I would take, I would have had in there, from my favort boots, (ony boots that ever fit) to a masage table, Oh dear. things thatI could not replace. Books, stones, My alter, Had just come from one event, had not unpacked from the war, had been to a con, had cleaned out my office at the hotline, and was about to go to a new con, and to NY to take my Reflexology Bords, had all of my documentation in the van, ever thing that I needed Dam.
Getting upset thinking about it. I had insurance cover it, but it jus twas heart breaking and devestation that some one would do this, and that most of the thing in the van had been tosed into a dmupster. And this done by partys that I knew.

Stil heart sick about some of the things, understand the lost of the instrument that you never got to play, it is like a still born child.
If there is any thing that I can do, let me know.

Diana
 
posted by [identity profile] dglenn.livejournal.com at 06:01pm on 2003-12-10
I count myself lucky that I didn't lose any guitars -- as bad as this has been, losing the guitar I learned on (yes, it's one of the ones I play on stage) would've been even worse. Last week I could hear that other people had been through worse, but wasn't ready to process that when I heard it. Now I'm getting a little perspective. A little.

As someone else wrote to me in email, an event like this leaves scars.

I'm not very good at figuring out what to ask for when people offer "if there's anything they can do" help ... and even though the offer's out there, I have trouble following through because I'm not good at asking for help. But I'm working on dealing with those issues, and I'll try to remember to ask when I know what I'm asking for. Thanks.
 
posted by [identity profile] flyingwolf.livejournal.com at 03:08am on 2003-12-05
Have you checked out insurance? Car? homeowners? Yours or your mothers. (yes, homeowners may cover stuff taken from your car) Remember, if you end up making a claim -- replacement cost.

I didn't read them all the comments (having my own fucking scarey week), but it seems that you have lots of friends willing to part with good camera equipment that they aren't using. Let their generosity replace your pain. Stuff can be replaced. Friends are longterm.
 
posted by [identity profile] dglenn.livejournal.com at 05:51pm on 2003-12-10
My car insurance doesn't cover anything but liability. Mom said her insurance doesn't cover theft. And I think my renter's insurance only covers stuff taken from my own car when it's parked in front of my house. :-(

I'm taking the number of friends offering help as a sign that I should keep trying. I appreciate everyone offering emotional support and encouragement as well.
There are 66 comments over 2 pages. (Reply.)
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