Perrysburg Pulse Magazine Perrysburg Pulse October | Page 7

town had gone to college; many had not even completed school. “Right then and there I decided I was going to go to college. I didn’t even know what college was, and if it was a good thing, but I was going to go. So I went and got an undergraduate degree in sociology and Spanish, which prepared me for basically nothing,” Norman quips. M Upon graduation, Norman began teaching. He took a job in Cleveland teaching fourth graders. There were 39 kids in a room, all from poor backgrounds. In addition to teaching, Norman had to be a male role model, a father figure so to speak. y introduction to Norman Fairman came through his photos, which he shares in an online group. I used to wait for his photos, sometimes even performing an internet search on the group just so I could admire what I came to call Norman’s “photo of the day.” Through his posts, Norman comes across as a kind gentleman who has a unique perspective on nature, one which he loves to share. When Norman and his wife, Jeanette, graciously invited me to their home, I realized how right I was! Yet, as any photography fan knows, there is a story behind the imagery. “Out of all these work years, and there have been many, that first job teaching was the most rewarding,” says Norman. “There is a lovely story correlating to this. About four Christmases ago, I got a message online from a gentleman who was in my fourth-grade class back in ’71. That exchange of messages went on to be a mini-class-reunion of kids I knew 54 years ago. I even got an award from them, really cocky to say, but the best one I’ve got. They all got personal photos from me, framed and all,” Norman recalls proudly. The home boasts a gallery that serves as a living archive of Norman’s life’s work. The teaching role had a lasting impact on the lives of the students as well as Norman’s. The Cleveland school is where he met Jeanette. “So the story is I’m an amateur photographer,” says Norman, “and friends would love to come over and see what new photos I had taken. Eventually we thought of having something open to the public and came across this space in the old garage that is fit for a little gallery. It just seemed like the perfect thing to do. The day we got this completed was the day I got my first symptoms. Of course, I haven’t had the energy to do a lot more with the gallery since the illness, but we did a few big shows and sold a lot of photos [on grassycreekphotography.com] and the response has been nice.” “She was that cute third-grade teacher down the hall,” Norman remembers. Jeanette adds, “My first year teaching was near where I grew up in Cleveland, and I was invited to go to the inner city to teach. Norman was a teacher in another school in the inner city and he got transferred to mine. I saw him the day before the kids came and I said, ‘Oh my God, look what they sent this year!’ At the time, Norman had long hair and wore contacts! We got married the following year.” Norman suffers from Parkinson’s disease. His illness makes it difficult to go out and shoot, but it doesn’t stop him. It was Jeanette’s brother who helped spark Norman’s interest in photography. Norman loves nature in all its forms and has an eye for finding beauty in the places least expected. On a wall in the hallway hangs a rather simple, yet stunning, photo of a path covered in lush foliage that conjures the feeling of being somewhere exotic, like the Irish countryside. “Jeanette’s brother was in the Vietnam War,” recalls Norman, “and he came back with a Pentax camera with a great lens on it, which I got from him. It was a black-and- white film camera and a friend and I built a dark room and printed our own photos. That was my initiation into photography; however, the Master’s degree and career took over, and so I put the camera away for 35 years.” “That was taken in Put-in-Bay,” Norman casually remarks, much to my surprise. Norman shares a delightful example of how he comes across photo opportunities by chance: “We have friends over at a farm and I took a picture of their barn, which I posted to the online group. Someone recognized the barn, and now our friends have the photo displayed on their wall proudly. When we presented this photo to them, we got an opportunity to witness thousands of Monarch butterflies on their annual migration. Many of my favorite photos are from there, and it happened by chance! I love capturing photos here in the United States itself—it’s so diverse in every possible way. I mean I get plenty of shots here in Perrysburg and always have people asking me in awe, ‘Where did you get this one?’, to which I joke—down the street!” The aforementioned master’s degree (in Education) gave Norman the prestige to secure a job lecturing at a university in Mexico. While there, he completed a doctoral program. After two years in Mexico, Norman received a call from his old college roommate, who was living in Toledo. He needed someone to join his manufacturing company and asked Norman if he was up for the task. Norman was and made the move back to the United States and his career shifted into manufacturing, working first in Human Resources and then transitioning into Sales and General Administration. Manufacturing was not the last stop on Norman’s industry- spanning career trajectory. He eventually landed in insurance. Norman comes from humble beginnings in rural western Pennsylvania. His hometown had only 12 houses and he attended school in a rustic one-room shed. His father worked in the coal mines and money was hard to come by. No one in the It is safe to say that during his 35-year break from photography, Norman was productive in other ways. In addition to living and working abroad and climbing the corporate ladder in 7