May 16, 2012
9 comments:
- Pasadena Adjacent said...
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I have nothing largely profound to say beyond finding the last two lines, when separated from the herd, had resonance for me. Life and death with a visual thrown in - iridescent scales (I trout fish)
I'm a late bloomer type. Information about structure, dangling participles etc was available to me but I just wasn't able to concentrate long enough to embrace it. I'm either smart or a little slow. The juries still out - May 17, 2012 at 10:57 AM
- Stickup Artist said...
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I think "Fishing" is so sad it's almost unbearable. Parent and child is a complicated relationship. Life is hard when you lose a parent too young or have a parent that is not available. You may have to learn to parent yourself or even parent your parent. Even in the "normal" scheme of things, when you are young, you don't really realize that one day, your parents won't be around and maybe you didn't appreciate them enough when they were around. I love the last 2 lines. There is always that invisible line pulled taut, good or bad, and it's your own lifeline. And if the line is broken, you spend a lifetime mending it.
- May 18, 2012 at 12:25 AM
- Pasadena Adjacent said...
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I forgot to mention how much I love the top mural. I tried to do something like that using Monty Montana and the reconfigured uniroyal tire company in compton (think kitchen syrian temples)
Do you have a larger jpg of it that you could send me (for reference needs) ? - May 18, 2012 at 10:13 AM
- Pasadena Adjacent said...
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drats - Mac's new auto spell check has me looking even more illiterate then I already am.....not kitchen but kitche
- May 18, 2012 at 10:14 AM
- Banjo52 said...
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PA and Stickup (and AH), I'm gonna have to revisit those lines after a few days away from them.
Stickup, thanks for the heartfelt comments. I don't hear anything I could, or would want to, argue with. Sometimes it seems there are no winners in the parent-child thing. Even in the best relationships, some things are very hard, and it's so easy to end up in NOT the best relationship.
PA, done, sent. And why not blame it on Mac. Or better yet, Blogspot. :) How about Facebook--they're rich now, so we could even sue them. - May 18, 2012 at 9:04 PM
- Brenda's Arizona said...
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Once again, late getting here.
'Fishing' makes me miss my dad... was I ever too old for what he wanted to share? - May 21, 2012 at 6:40 PM
- Banjo52 said...
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Brenda, big, big question. Do you have an answer (not necessarily an accurate one)?
- May 22, 2012 at 5:56 PM
- Brenda's Arizona said...
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To which question?
- May 22, 2012 at 7:00 PM
- Banjo52 said...
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The only one you asked--I suppose it's kinda personal . . . "Was I ever too old for what he wanted to share?"
- May 25, 2012 at 4:10 PM
I've never been to Deer Creek but have often wondered what it's like. I need to head up there one of these days.
May 13, 2012 11:54 PM
As a father of three girls and and a boy, I know the situation all too well. :-) Being with your parents doing what you used to love, but now feel that you are growing out of - only you haven't. The relationship and the fun is still there. It's all about the process of growing up and getting independent. You discover that blood is still thicker than water and that you have more in common than the family name. Oh - beautifully written (I'm sure I have lost many of the nice details) with fitting photographs :-)
I see what you mean about the ending. I think it hangs on the word "weighing"...
I thought of that Elizabeth Bishop poem, "The Fish," which is not at all my favorite poem of hers (but perhaps one of the most often anthologized). I think there is something to this....that there is a trope of the fishing poem. Maybe?
The poet Marita Dachsel has a strong fish poem ("Fish Stories"). I can't find the full text....just these lines: "The gills were still moving when my father inserted his knife/…when he scooped out the organs he saw the heart still/ pumping. He said nothing…and then/ placed it in my open palm."
The invisible line pulled taut that links them both"
Those two lines in and of them selves have a rather pleasing appeal.Yes, they do seem jagged and contrived placed where they are.
It's always a pleasure to watch you map out a poem into it's rules and regulations via that hard light. I always regret that I wasn't able to grasp (or be exposed) to those kind of concepts when I was young.
And I respond: