Still, Like Yesterday by Eagle Omomuro

Still, Like Yesterday – One Shot Story

By Eagle Omomuro

My wife and I were seen as the lucky ones when we settled in Tasmania. We called it the great escape.

Imagine this: fewer than six hundred thousand people living on a land of sixty eight thousand square kilometers, with endless sunshine, salty seabreeze, sheep and cattle grazing on soft hills, and a slow, quiet life behind every door.

Now imagine waking up in a tiny studio in a city of over ten million, standing in a packed subway train for more than an hour each way, then leaning against ten other people in an elevator, pressed shoulder to shoulder.

When our friends visited a few years ago, they said this must be what heaven feels like.

Yes, and perhaps no.

The more we settled in, the more we began to feel a different kind of exhaustion. We love the people and the place, but nothing seems to stir within us anymore. Life here is so remote and peaceful that something feels absent. Something thrilling, something exciting, something that makes us jealous, something that urges us to change… none of it is here. We are not sure if it is the isolation, or simply that we entered our midlife crisis a little too early. We are slowly decaying.

It is like that old lady we know.

She was born in Hungary during the Soviet era and grew up as a devoted communist. In her youth, she met Joseph Stalin in person. As a reward for winning a multinational sports competition, he might have shaken her hand or even kissed her cheek. Years later, she became an activist, standing against the Soviet invasion of her country. She fled, first to the United Kingdom, then to New Zealand, and finally to Tasmania. Each move was shaped by a different reason: a foster family, a marriage, a series of puzzles unfolding one by one.

What a life it was. A life filled with belief, honor, resistance, and escape.

And yet, she told me that after all of that, she has lived in Tasmania for thirty years, and nothing has really changed, except the flowers in her garden. Her first day here, she said, still feels like yesterday.

And then there is this photo.

A meaningless photo, taken with a Nikon F3T made in 1985, the year I was born, using a 50mm prime and expired negative film that had sat untouched for over a decade. It was shot during one of our once-a-month road trips to the Great Lake in central Tasmania. It is so meaningless that it does not try to say anything grand, nor to inspire anyone. But it was the only excitement I felt during that trip.

I am not trying to make a statement like, look, these rocks must have been here for millions of years, and now my beautiful, naked wife, curled beside the dead tree roots, becomes a vivid addition to this eternal and peaceful landscape.

No. Not like that.

It reminds me of a recent exhibition here in Tasmania by a Chinese artist. In a television interview, she explained how she had deliberately painted Tasmania’s native flowers alongside artificial Chinese objects, attempting to create a meaningful fusion. It was intentional, symbolic, and carefully presented. But that is exactly the opposite of what I want.

I want to believe there’s something waiting beyond the lake and the mountains. Something unknown. Something worth chasing.

But I know what’s over there. Another winding road through silent forests. A few sharp turns, then the same ranches stretching out under the same sky. A vineyard here and there. The same small shops with the same old women behind the counters, unchanged, as if time forgot them.

It’s all familiar, all already seen, just like the old rocks on this side of the lake.

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About The Author

By Eagle Omomuro
Hello 35mmc community. I'm a photographer who tries to explore the unconventional. Originally trained in professional photojournalism, I’ve shifted my focus to capturing moments that express raw emotions that I call Tanha and Dukkha. My current direction is inspired by Ero Guro Nansensu, a Japanese genre that blends eroticism, sexual corruption, and decadence. Feel free to explore my work at nansensu.com.au
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Comments

Miguel Mendez on Still, Like Yesterday – One Shot Story

Comment posted: 17/07/2025

Es muy profundo e inquietante. Eres joven , tal vez tienes que partir ahora que estas a tiempo , luego puede ser desolador.
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Ibraar Hussain replied:

Comment posted: 17/07/2025

como él dijo

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Peter grey on Still, Like Yesterday – One Shot Story

Comment posted: 17/07/2025

I like the picture and especially the read a lot. Heaven is hard to find.
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Gary Smith on Still, Like Yesterday – One Shot Story

Comment posted: 17/07/2025

Eagle, I love your article!

I just turned 71, I don't need to be chasing anything these days.

I live in the USA, I do hope there is something beyond 2028 for us.
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Dave Powell replied:

Comment posted: 17/07/2025

Amen!

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Dave Powell on Still, Like Yesterday – One Shot Story

Comment posted: 17/07/2025

I think this is quite poetic, Eagle. For project inspiration, maybe you could look up the American photographer Harry Callahan's photographs of his naked wife. One of them is so abstract that one doesn't realize what it really is!
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Ibraar Hussain on Still, Like Yesterday – One Shot Story

Comment posted: 17/07/2025

Man don’t be so down, you’re young and have your whole life ahead to explore places which interest you - then return home to relax in what seems like a lovely sort of place I’d like to rest in.

I live in rural east Anglia in England. Nothing going on here but we all have God’s green Earth to enjoy and experience and it’s all around us.
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Geoff Chaplin on Still, Like Yesterday – One Shot Story

Comment posted: 18/07/2025

I know the feeling so well. I moved to rural Japan, Hokkaido, 20 years ago. A house on the corner of an asparagus field. The ancient Romans had taught me the ideal life was part in the middle of nowhere and part in the centre of the city. So that's the way it was for 15 years. Fresh home grown veg and mountain climbing half the year and exhibitions, concerts, parties the other half. Until COVID. Then we shuttered down cut off from the world for three years except for the very few occasions when boredom made us venture out.

If it's an either/or choice then maybe it's time to move back to the city.
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David Hume on Still, Like Yesterday – One Shot Story

Comment posted: 18/07/2025

Hi Eagle - nice to see another piece from you so soon after the last!

Tasmania is indeed a calm and beautiful place, but it is a place that also received 75,000 transported convicts with the establishment of the English Penal colonies between 1803 and 1853. Only 200 years ago it was in the midst of this. And with colonisation came dire consequences for the First Nations Inhabitants. I say this for no political reason, but only because on my recent trip to Tasmania I could feel this brutality steeped in the atmosphere along with the beauty.

As clearly you are a thoughtful person, if you have not already done so I am sure that you will be able to consider your thoughts in the context of the many artistic and philosophical schools of though that are similar to yours.

Absurdist, Dada, Nihilist, for example, are good places to start.

What strikes me most strongly though is the paradox that in making something with the intention of giving it no meaning, you are, ipso facto, putting meaning into what it is you make. This pondering of the meaningless is ironically full of meaning! (You could read Samuel Beckett, Camus and Sartre if you've not already)

Given that there is a close connection to nature (of both the natural and the built environments) in your work, you might also like to look into what Tasmania's First Nations people had to say about the land living in harmony with it, and see if that resonates with you, as it does with many non-indigenous people.

Anyway, I feel there are many exciting and worthwhile avenues of meaning to explore in your work should you choose to. The fact that you are sharing your thoughts here publicly indicates to me that this path might be one you find worthwhile.

Cheers.
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