Dancing Echoes

Beats Stumbling Around in Silence

Blue Light

17 Comments

image

Calm washes over
Dawn gently caresses day
In soothing blue light

In response to Pic and a Word Challenge #53: Blue and
CARPE DIEM HAIKU KAI: Carpe Diem #1046 dawn

Author: Dancing Echoes

I am a scientist by trade and artist by soul. My creative outlet used to be dancing but due to injuries and age, I must now find another path. I am hoping my writing, poetry and photography can be this new path. Awards: While I am grateful and honored for the numerous nominations, I don’t have time to respond to them with the attention they deserve, so for the most part, I am an award free blog. All photographs and words are mine unless otherwise credited. © 2015-2024 Dancing Echoes ALL RIGHTS RESERVED Unauthorized use and/or duplication of this material without express and written permission from this blog’s author/owner is strictly prohibited. Excerpts and links may be used, provided that full and clear credit is given to Christy Draper with appropriate and specific direction to the original content on Dancing Echoes.

17 thoughts on “Blue Light

  1. Stunning photo with beautiful words.

    Liked by 2 people

  2. Oh, sweet! An inverse Jesus Effect! =)

    Heh… what different takes we have on sunrise, this morning. In word and image. Love yours.

    Liked by 2 people

  3. Thank you. I actually worked on mine all week and saw your most recent just before I posted. It gave me a chuckle and I live your perspective too.

    Liked by 1 person

  4. <smile> I wrote the poem last night around midnight, while filming The Magicians (slow night for me, so I had some time). Completed the post when I got home around 3AM (tags, excerpts, yada-yada).

    No wonder there is such clarity and vision in your words; you’ll sit with them for a week, listening to what they want to say. Lovely.

    Liked by 1 person

  5. Thanks. Some I sit with, some I don’t. Some come as fast as a snap of my fingers. Others have a feeling they aren’t quite right. Those are the ones I cogitate. Many times my patience is rewarded with a spark from somewhere else and usually where I least expect it.
    A recent experience of assembling my poetry for a submission had me sit back and critique my words without photos. I learned which poems stood alone and which ones didn’t. I still want to combine both photos and words but I need to sharpen my poetry skills for sure. It was a painful but valuable lesson.

    Liked by 3 people

  6. I catch you on tying photographs to the words. Mine tend to be inextricably wound together as the image is nearly always the genesis point for the words. There are often nuances and metaphors in the words which connections with the image clarify.

    Aside from always ‘needing’ to sharpen our skills, I think your poetry works just fine, whether it is wound through an image or not. Words don’t always need to stand alone. Some are written to be spoken aloud. Some to be sung. Some to be acted. Some to inspire the making of a moving image. And some to illuminate an image, or the experience of viewing one, or being the person to take it, or being in the place or metaphysical space it was taken.

    I think the better poet is one who understands the context in which the words exist, and adjusts them to that context.

    <grin> “Cogitate” and “spark”. Fascinating, isn’t it, how rarely the spark comes while actually cogitating? It comes when the mind is quiet, or distracted by some other minor task. The inspiration — which has always been laying there, beneath the surface of our working mind — gets its chance to rise to the surface. The obstruction of our thinking, for a moment, is whisper thin. The words percolate up, and we finally smell the coffee. 😉

    I learned to write words while learning to build software.

    It just occurs to me, I began to write poetry while learning to listen to my deepest self. No, while learning to listen to something even deeper than that.

    When I have the feeling words aren’t quite right. I stop cogitating, quiet my mind, and listen to that voice deeper than self. That’s usually where the words come from. And always the best ones.

    Liked by 2 people

  7. Stunning photo and words. Loved the philosophy behind your comment to Mr Jennings. It takes grit to be able to examine your work in a detached manner. I would wager your scientific background is a great help to you in that regard.

    Liked by 3 people

  8. You’re very welcome! 😃

    Liked by 1 person

  9. Thank you. Yes, most of the time I find it helpful. Sometimes it gets in the way though. I never want to get too clinical or dry.

    Liked by 1 person

  10. Pingback: Withering ~ Pic and a Word Challenge #54 – pix to words

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