The Older Woman Sitting by the WIndow

Woman sitting by the window Corey Amaro

 

 

 

Walking along a street in Arles I saw an older woman sitting by a window. If it hadn't been for the brown worn shutters, and the white sheer curtain that framed her face… I would not have seen the small shadow of a person peering out.

 

 

Woman sitting by the window Corey Amaro 

 

Aiming my lens at the second floor I hoped to capture the stillness of the scene, the age, the solemn color, the moment. The woman by the window didn't sit still…she moved in and out of the shadow of the curtain. I held my camera and waited.

 

 

Woman-sitting-by-the-window 

 

While I was focusing my camera on her silhouette, she turned around and looked directly at me. Her eye and my eye caught each other inside the lens. Instead of taking her picture, I lowered my camera and sheepishly smiled at her, then I held my hand up, sort of as a wave and an apology. Her eyes sparkled as she smiled back, and I knew she didn't mind. I wanted to ring her doorbell and run up the stairs to meet her.

Instead I walked down the street, carrying the image of her smiling at me. What a lovely image to have.

In that moment, in our silent exchange, I felt like we met. Have you ever felt like that? A chance meeting between two people where something goes beyond words, time or activity, and you know you have shared another space and time together?



Comments

16 responses to “The Older Woman Sitting by the WIndow”

  1. yes I have had that happen to me a few times-I believe that souls know one another or our familiar from another time place or space-there is so much that we don’t know about time and space but when something like this happens it gives pause for a good think!

  2. Powerful, Corey. My mind wants to hear her story as it must be incredible, my heart wishes her happiness as she looks so lonely. It was good to read that she gave you a smile.

  3. What an beautiful story. I wonder if she would be waiting tomorrow at the same time to see if you go pass again.

  4. Beautiful lovely sentiments…………….
    I am glad you made her smile…………
    Love Jeanne

  5. jend’isère

    I adore those shared moments which stand still in time with the unknown. Perhaps she was watchign the 1950s film of Vincent Van Gogh on TV on Arte yesterday afternoon. The scènes of his room from which he shouted out of his window in his house in Arles could have been that one!

  6. I’ve had a similar experience years ago while driving. I was turning a corner on a busy city street and met a man in a truck turning the opposite direction. As we passed each other we locked eyes. It felt as if time went into slow motion without sound. I instinctively knew we had known each other in a different time and place!!

  7. ipostale@gmail.com

    Hmmm… is the person a man?

  8. Linda P.

    Sometimes such brief encounters do change our day. I try to remember that when I meet someone’s glance.

  9. Beautiful.

  10. About to write the same word Claudia!

  11. Love
    XXX
    x

  12. Lori Ann Corelis

    The catch of an eye, a wink a nod . . tis all it takes to make a connection!
    Real connection . . . real world.
    Thank you for sharing!
    Lori Ann
    (friend of Miss Nicol 🙂

  13. The images are precious. Yes, when meeting a kindred spirit of the heart there is a connection whether words are spoken or not.

  14. You know what I love most about all of this? You saw her. You SAW her. So many people sit in lonely rooms with lonely lives and no one sees them. Whether she’s lonely or not, I love that you saw her.

  15. Ann-Helen

    Touching story…I think she will look for you and hope to see you again – and next time ring her doorbell, ring her doorbell, please! I am sure meeting you will make her day, or even the week or month =)
    Ann-Helen from Norway

  16. Brenda, Walker, LA

    Yes, and it is as spiritual as it is eventful.
    Doesn’t happen often, but so appreciate when it does.

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