Photography and poetry/prose

Photographs stimulate my thoughts into action.

I have the urge to write what I'm thinking when I look at a photograph; either my own or those of others.

"I do it because I can" Nevayah Ormond age 8 years. 2019




Learning to swim.

 

The fishing boat rises and falls on the turbulent blue-black sea.

One moment I see it, riding high.

The next it is barely visible. I wait for it to return

It seems  as if the man is drowning.

Not screaming, just quietly accepting his fate

Because he didn't learn to swim.

A strange decision for a man in a boat at sea.

 

He places his success at what he does in the hands of his god.

He learnt from his father, as his father did his. That seemed enough.

Up until now his skills were sufficient. A strike from a stick from his father ensured he listened. 

A soft word from his grandfather reinforced his faith.

Perhaps a caress from rope burned hands and moral support from a broken back.

Up until now he has been rewarded. A regular catch most days, enough to feed on and sell at the market.

Now he is to blame. The net is empty, his children hungry.

He searches the past for his mistakes, his wrong doings, his sins from which no redemption came.

He beat his wife once to often and too hard.

He over-priced his catch or sold yesterday’s fish today.

A man must provide. He must be strong. 

Now he feels the weakness of his age.

His god is his only guidance now. Provide or be punished. The law is simple. It is the gospel of the enslaved. 

Now he feels the chill of the sea at his feet. His life is leaking away.

He sits and waits. God will come. God is his only hope.

A wave catches his breath. He chokes, tastes the salt, he feels the sting in his soul.

He hears his wife cry. His son is gone some years, drowned as he would, on a lonely sea. The sea is unforgiving. The waves drown the sounds of sorrow. The sea is its own god, answerable to no one. As deep and cold as any part of nature.

He calls for his son, his father, his god.

There is no answer. He knows there is no answer. 

The last wave comes. 

The fisherman casts his last bait into the Black Sea below.

He feels the tug of the deep and he resists momentarily.

He opens his eyes and sees the end. It is quiet and welcoming for him now.

There is no more anguish, no pain of living, just the joy of having lived, of knowing what life is and does.

He closes his eyes and mind against the currents of thought that brought him here.

He says goodby to his maker and stops breathing.

 

The sea continues to move under the lifeless body. Fish gather and feed. 

Nothing remains now except the memories of others. 

Today he will be the reward for the fisherman of the sea. 

Him not them; the others, the survivors, the ones that learnt to swim.

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Image result for Learning to swim poem

Image result for poem about the holocaust

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In the end, only three things matter. How much you loved, how gently you lived and how gracefully you let go of things not meant for you.  "Buddha"

Image result for cat in the hat poems funny

As Samuel Taylor Coleridge said: “Prose: words in their best order; poetry: the best words in the best order.”

The absurd genius of Spike Milligan below LOL.

Today I saw a little worm
Wriggling on his belly.
Perhaps he’d like to come inside
And see what’s on the Telly.

Said Hamlet to Ophelia,
‘I’ll do a sketch of thee,
What kind of pencil shall I use,
2B or not 2B?’

From the serious and confronting to the nonsensical ... poetry is always a good read for the soul IMO.

--------------------------------------------------

Thank you 'The Dingo' for starting this topic.

Hoping to see more of your photos and writing.

I wonder??

Sometimes I stop to wonder as I wander through my day,

if any of the people I encounter on the way

ever stop to wonder about love and life and such.

And, if they do, I wonder if they wonder just how much

time is spent just wondering about the things they see.

And then I start to wonder if they wonder about me... (O_O)

as I go round just wondering from dawn to setting sun.

It's no bloody wonder I don't get a damn thing done.

Did you write that Leonie? It is great :).

Thanks, and yeah it's one of my silly little ditties.  lol.   Looks like you are a poet too, and good at tackling the big questions.  It's a goodun' NY19.

Do we deceive ourselves?  It's a good question.  Maybe we do.

Thanks Leonie. I’m not a very good poet and haven’t dabbled in the art for years. That just popped out last night inspired by your “I Wonder” poem. My friend was an atheist while I am agnostic...so now she knows, or if correct, doesn’t know anything anymore...while I’m left here to wonder...and hope.

A dear friend my age has died

I will miss her so

and then it hits me heavily

like a confronting mortal blow

How surely close and just behind

I will follow her flow...

This is life and it’s end

as we all so know.

 

We pretend death is far away

until our friends are stolen

to move into a realm beyond 

of that which we’re not beholden

We grieve and sieve our souls in 

soup so unfamiliar to the known

until our own time comes

and we go to our home.

 

Or do we? What is death? 

Do we fantasise....that death is not the end?

Do we deceive ourselves

to hang onto a friend? 

 

 

Image result for a love poem by famous poet

Bush poet Murray Hartin’s haunting words in Rain From Nowhere still resonate 11 years after he first penned them

 

The Dingo..

Is the poem "Learning to swim", one of your works?


Everything I post is 'one of my works' Sophie.

I did a lot of academic writing while studying and teaching. If I used an idea or paraphrase or quote from another text it was imperative I recognise the source.

I never got out of the habit.

I promise you. Everything you read will be mine, even the lies.

Then my friend..this must be your blog! So happy to meet another blogger on the forum :)

 

http://notesfromthecamera.blogspot.com/2017/12/the-fishing-boat-rises-and-falls-on.html

 

 

That link looks familiar Sophie

Well spotted  Related image

A few years ago our State Government in its wisdom commissioned a statue of an elephant sort of tipped over with a mouse or rat there somewhere.  It was called something like 'The world turns' and it stands (on its head) in front of our art gallery. 

I can't work out how to post pictures on here now that I can't use Firefox to post anything (still not working) but this link might work.  https://www.qagoma.qld.gov.au/whats-on/kids/the-world-turns

Sorry in advance to all the people I will probably offend by making fun of this art piece - and to all the people here who no doubt take this topic seriously.  I do write the occasional serious poem, but on the whole, that's not how my mind works.  I'm not really all that good at deep and meaningful, more the shallow and frivolous. It's a pity in a way, funny poems rarely win competitions, and if perchance they do, inevitably the prize money is lower.  I would have a much healthier share portfolio if that wasn't the case.

Just sayin' judges...  ;)

 

 

A Rambling of Rubbish

 

I’ve heard of a barrel of monkeys,

and also a murder of crows.

I think there is even an elephant ‘crash’.

(I saw one that fell on its nose).

 

A shiver of sharks would be scary;

a wisdom of owls wouldn’t be.

A chattering either of budgerigars

or chickens sounds noisy to me.

 

I’ve heard of a puddle of puppies,

(the puppies all piddled I ‘spose).

I wish I could witness a dazzle of zebras

but we don’t have many of those.

 

A gaggle of geese might confront us

an army of ants might attack,

a rhumba of rattlesnakes might want to dance

and a jellyfish swarm is a ‘smack’.

 

There’s also a kindle of kittens.

My kindle sure doesn’t meow

but it has a ‘prickle of porcupines’ photo

to view if I only knew how.

 

Some people might have hordes of hamsters

(I’d rather have hamsters than gnats).

Out here in the colonies we don’t have beavers

but we sure have plenty of bats.

 

A group of baboons is a congress,

a labour of moles, not unknown.

Apparently cheetahs group in coalitions.

(I think I’ll leave that one alone.)

 

And vultures in groups are committees.

And crows can be parliaments too,

or hovers, or musters, or murders or hordes.

On that note I think I’ll shoot through.

 

HooRoo

 

 

Leonie ...most enjoyable :)

I've had to change from Firefox to Google Chrome to post on YLC which enables me to post pictures.

Michael Parekowhai, The World Turns 2011-12

... also I recently changed to Windows 10 which I am learning to use.

A very pleasant change from the usual, 

as poetry is now being happily published,

why can’t we have a slot for this site

instead of the swearing and rubbish?

 

 

 

Image result for scott kelby pictures of venice

Simply adore this series of images by Scott Kelby, one of my favourite photographers. Perhaps it is because I have visited Venice many times and have been to all the places Scott captured in his images..hope others find the pictures enjoyable 

I am not a photographer myself preferring to embed precious memories in my mind..so I rely on family members or other travel companions to take on the task.

Enjoy….

https://scottkelby.exposure.co/the-magic-of-venice

 

Beautiful Sophie. Those pictures and the jokes gave me a lift today. The weather is so bad here :(

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