March 1st, 2010
Seeing is Believing
Last night the full moon appeared like a flamboyant floodlight. It seemed to echo, “Is anyone alive down there…down there…down there? It is I, floodlight moon.” It appeared close but was actually 238,857 miles away! Our eyes can play tricks on us.
Even so, they are rich visual collectors. Two blue, brown, hazel or green mini artists, taking in life portraits, freeze framing them into memory the way paint adheres to canvas. A scoop of bangs across a forehead, inky black like a raven’s wing, dead leaves twirling on bare sun drenched branches or snow swelled on the ground like thick, whirled whipped cream.
I remember seeing my newborn daughter’s eyes for the first time. Like soul windows, new, but ancient and full of penetrating light. When they lay each in my arms, of course in different years, their haunting eyes explored mine, speaking without sound. Why hello dear mama, they seemed to say. I’ve felt your heartbeat and heard your cries and laughter a thousand times. Here you are now. I see you. They knew me and I them. Any mother can tell you how poignant this is. It is something we never forget, this lavish visual communication without words. I promise not to mention babies anymore, but I do love them.
Eyes alone speak of innocence, pain, sadness, joy, confusion, wildness and sometimes evil, all without saying a word.
If we have been blessed with our vision intact, our brain does the work of preserving previous sights into memory. I can still see the metallic shimmer of dollar sunfish, greasing through an Arkansas River, sun catching the star-burst of yellow bellies. And creamy vanilla colored jack-in-the-pulpits, glazing up an Illinois spring forest we wandered through as children. And red-winged black bird eggs, pale blue-green and freckled, cuddled tight in marshy nests.
It’s exciting to use this visionary sense in our writing. Here’s an example from my WIP, The Passion Diary.
Driving through Millview, men with wilted faces sat outside Hunters Gas Mart. On splintered wooden benches some whispered and whittled while others stood, eclipsed by smoke clouds wafting from lit points of cigarettes. The locals referred to the spot as Limber Dick Corner. God help me, I didn’t want to grow old.
Turning down Main Street, earth rose behind ancient buildings, disguised in fresh paint. Brambly blackberry vines clamored up a long row of fence, berries dangling and not yet flushed purple. Trees, heavy with green foliage, clung to hillsides and I wondered what was blending and dashing through not visible to the naked eye.
This is pure visual description and why I wanted to use it as an example. I could go back and add smell-the soil, cigarette smoke, etc… I could also throw in taste-of the eventual ripened berries, but for these paragraphs I probably won’t.
Hopefully, if I’ve done my job well, sight alone tells you this is a small town with old secrets.
So, my writing buddies, please enjoy every visual treat this week. Remember, seeing is believing…sometimes.




March 2nd, 2010 at 3:45 pm
Oh Dorraine, thank you so much for sharing that passage. I love it! Yours is the finest example of descriptive writing there is and I can’t wait to read this book. I cracked up at the prospect of him getting old and having to (pardon the pun) hang out at Limber Dick Corner. Let’s hope it doesn’t turn out that way.
Did you take that picture? That is absolutely gorgeous!
I needed a smile – thank you for sending one.
March 2nd, 2010 at 8:56 pm
You are always full of kind things to say. Thank you always, Deanna for not being stingy with your well wishes. I see you spread them around and that puts you a step above many.
Umm…I never say what I feel..ha.
Yeah, hanging out at Limber Dick Corner, good one! I tried to think how a man would about growing older.
No, I didn’t take the picture, just kind of fell for it. Keep smiling!
March 4th, 2010 at 10:47 am
I saw the moon the other day and thought almost the same thing. I took a photo of it…find in on my 365 Views by Me, blog. Although it is not near as interesting as the one here.
great post on the visual
March 4th, 2010 at 7:45 pm
Oh, I’ll have to check out your moon pic. The one I posted came from photobucket but it captured the moon, hanging low in the sky. Thanks, Paige.