Each has to find their own answer, or rather find it their own way.
The whole point with all these pictures, not just those last two, is to feel them.
The great task of the being who's sensitivity has been opened, is how to extend towards the beautiful and not be flooded by the harsh, the horrific and the sad. There were some famous photos I left out - the man being shot by the police commander in Vietnam, the naked napalm child in Vietnam, and some others. I just didn't feel like going there, but I have been there.
The first and foremost answer is to find one's way past the reaction. If you look carefully you will see that these reactions are about the suffering of others. We unconsciously place ourselves in their shoes. We feel their anguish as ours.
The task asked of us is to arrive at the point where nothing matters. That is our only escape. And with each situation it is different, and I can talk about each situation and how I personally made my way through their prison of pain to come out to the only point of absolute freedom. Each is different, but the way out is always the same.
Don Juan said: when I see something painful, I simply switch my eyes.
But he didn't always switch his eyes ... he disliked overcast days and loved poetry.
When each of these pictures no longer upsets you, when you can switch your eyes, then your compassion has value, and then you can read poetry in the sunlight.
Was a time I decided to face this once and for all - I stood in the street in India one day for a very long time looking at a cow with a mangled bloody leg, whom no one tendered nor cared for. The cow looked at me. I knew I could not go on till I had answered. Sure I could have taken up a life of being Mother Therese - she was not the only one, there are many people in that country and mine who have devoted their life to the relief of suffering, and I have only the highest praise for them, but that was not the question.
The question was how could I go on knowing this pain existed. What if I had walked down a different road, would the pain be any less. If I just 'don't want to know', will that answer the question?
Finally I answered the question, but it was no answer really. It was that pain exists - no point in hiding or denying. We live with pain. It was okay. It didn't need healing.
When I heal now, it's not because I need to, it's because I choose to, for no reason ... its my way of living.
So when I look at these pictures, I feel the beauty, and I feel the agony. And much agony is not known except by those who are free. That was Buddha's compassion - not for the suffering, but for the fact people didn't know the answer to suffering. That point is commonly misunderstood.
So I no longer hide from the pain. I don't enjoy it, but I enjoy life, and pain is part of life. I don't seek it, but when I see it, I feel it, and I accept it first, before I seek a remedy. As Jahn would say, I own it.