Things I've Seen Float By
Blaze's Boat
Blaze's Boat
Writing On The Dock of The Bay
Once I asked my friend Leonard Gardner to help me figure out how to put a new ribbon in my old Smith & Corona upright. He came downstairs to our dim flat where my typewriter sat on a bright blue table and typed: ‘First we must have light.’ I’ve never forgotten that, and now some thirty years later sitting in a room full of light I think how it works both ways – how we need light to write, and how writing itself provides us with light, how it casts meaning and understanding onto the page and allows us to play with our shadow.
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Writing On The Dock of The Bay
Monday while listening to a piece by Beethoven on the radio, the piano sounded so smooth and effortless and beautiful, rising and gliding and soaring and I watched a bird soaring over the smooth lagoon and they were in synch, maybe one and the same- the music, the bird, and me.
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Scout
What you don't see in this photo is the exuberant, crotch-seeking dog named Scout who is being kept at bay with one hand, somewhat futilely, while his owner - a friendly stranger - takes this shot; all of us out for a waterfront walk on a brisk November day .
Writing on The Dock of The Bay
We were worried. Santa was running late this year. He summers in the houseboat across the channel. We're sure it's him. All bets are off on whether that's Mrs. Claus. She seems younger. November. Shouldn't he be gone? Toys don't just make themselves. Yesterday he sipped tea in the sun in a breezy aloha shirt as a flotilla of awol geese drifted by. He's lost weight, too. Not always a good sign at a certain age. People wonder. Privately, I edited my wish list to guard against Christmas morning letdown. Also, I had a bit of an off year. Last night I heard ringing - was it a dream? Someone's hull alarm? This morning, blinds across the channel were closed- not a creature was stirring. The houseboat looked buttoned up for winter. That was no dream I'd had, no cause for alarm I'd heard- that ringing was swell. Once again, Santa has answered the bell!
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Denizen of the Dock, Jim Woessner, guest blogger
Tourists freeze because their travel agent only said "California," which means "sun" in most languages. But no one told them you can die from fog exposure in June. And they say "guten tag" or "ciao bella," and ask, "What's it like to live on water?" "How much does it cost to own a houseboat?" And always, "How do you deal with sewage?" So I say "guten tag" or whatever, and then "swell," "a whole lot," and "a big pipe." Jim Woessner, Little Boxes
Novembeer
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photo by Ruth Biederman Fitzsimmons
Writing On The Dock Of The Bay
Falling Under The Influence of Place
Sometimes place becomes the starting point. Where we go from there becomes an adventure, a journey of creation and discovery. Sometimes, where we started when we began to write, gets left in the dust; so too does the genre we thought we were in. And when that harp plays and it's time to wrap things up, we wonder where the story we just wrote came from, and where and when and how did time itself disappear . . .
One's destination is never a place, but rather a new way of looking at things. - Henry Miller
Passing Through
Writing On The Dock Of The Bay
When you live in a place that's featured in guidebooks and documentaries (not to mention blogs!), it's a different kind of life. At times you have to navigate your way through clusters of camera toting tourists as you take out the trash or bring in groceries from the car. But most of the visitors are happy and considerate. When the woman from Dallas told me, "I want your life!" as I returned from the compost bin, her grin reminded me yet again of the beauty of this place and our good fortune to live here. As if I needed reminding. Alas, sometimes I do. It's true - my best teachers don't even know they are teaching me. Last night on the dock an elderly gentleman smiled and said, "It's a fairyland here, isn't it?" I smiled back, repeating fairyland to myself, thinking - we need fairylands in our lives, no matter how old or young we become.
Anyone who keeps the ability to see beauty in every age of life really never grows old." - Franz Kafka
Felines of SoFo
Things I've Seen Float By