The Edge of Being
To stand at the edge of the world is not to conquer it. It is to acknowledge the scale of one’s own disappearance. We arrive with our names, our histories, and our small, frantic intentions, hoping the land will recognize us. But the land is indifferent. It has seen the tide pull back a thousand times, and it will see it again long after we have turned away. There is a quiet terror in this, but also a strange, cold comfort. To be small is to be free from the burden of significance. We are merely passing through the frame, a temporary disturbance in the salt and the wind. If we stay still enough, the horizon stops being a boundary and begins to look like a mirror. What remains of us when the water finally claims the footprint? Does the silence grow heavier, or does it simply wait for the next arrival?

Cameron Cope has captured this stillness in his image titled Self Portrait at Pancake Creek. He places himself where the earth meets the vastness, asking us to consider our own place in the expanse. Will you stand there with him, or keep walking?


