Sunday, September 27, 2009

Fragment -- #190

[November 2001 journal entry]

Metaphors that have mattered deeply to me:

  1. the pole climber leaning back from the utility pole and trusting his work belt,
  2. crawling under the Vermont house we were ready to purchase only to find a seriously cracked foundation,
  3. the need to find healthy tissue before beginning a hernia repair,
  4. placing storm windows when you do not have enough to cover all windows,
  5. my eyes locking with my eight-year-old daughter’s eyes as she lost control of her bicycle in some gravel,
  6. the decision to remove training wheels,
  7. a black hole’s inward pull and resulting destruction,
  8. the free yet shared experience when jazz musicians play together,
  9. being in Parliament but not in ‘the government’,
  10. the huddle behind the line of scrimmage on the football field,
  11. the wilderness,
  12. the difference in perspective when traveling through Appalachia on the interstate or on the back roads,
  13. a solar or lunar eclipse,
  14. remodeling a house,
  15. my Boy Scout 2nd-class required five-mile hike through fields compass in hand with my Dad,
  16. theatre’s prompter,
  17. leaven,
  18. the porch,
  19. the Norwich ‘dump’ where parents taught children about recycling and ‘community’,
  20. the irrigation ditch,
  21. the mudder on a drywall team,
  22. the elementary school student who learns there is no Santa Claus at the North Pole,
  23. driving a nail deep into the wood,
  24. the parcel in Bonhoeffer’s prison correspondence,
  25. the pivot,
  26. . . . .