December 2006
SAVOR THE MOMENT: INSPIRATION FOR WRITERS
by Aaron Paul Lazar
It's
the last day of August. Autumn has already stretched tentative tendrils
toward us, cooling the evenings and drenching the morning with heavy
dew. Today, as I rounded the top of a hill overlooking the valley,
my breath caught in my throat. Before me lay the snaking path of
the Genesee River, previously hidden from casual view behind fields
and woods. Nebulous clouds of fog hovered above, revealing the river
route that quietly meanders out of sight most of the year.
My soul exploded with a sensation of splendor best described by
the Japanese philosophy, wabi sabi*. This was a wabi sabi moment
- a fraction of time linking nature and man, steeped in intense
sensual beauty...so full of wonder it transports you to a moment
of spiritual enlightenment.
In addition to the vapor-bound river, the countryside was punctuated
with farmers' ponds, exposed via banks of fog steaming overhead.
Normally hidden by tall fields of grass or corn, the wisps of moisture
called attention to the quiet shallows, home to frogs and watering
holes for livestock.
Stunned by the beauty, invigorated beyond belief, I continued on
the drive that I'd taken thousands of times before. Heading north
on River Road, whispers of "Thank you, God," floated in
my brain. Still and amorphous, the words vibrated in syncopation
with stirring grasses.
Once again, nature presented a feast so lovely I choked with emotion.
There, to the east, clusters of wheat waved in the sunlight with
heavy heads bowed under the weight of soaking dew, their curvatures
swan-like as they moved in glistening silence.
The ephemeral nature of this phenomenon is part of the allure. That
precise moment of intense immersion, that amazing connection with
nature, will never repeat. The suns rays may not hit the grass with
exactly the same angle or intensity. The grass will change tomorrow,
perhaps drier, taller, or shorn. This transient moment of staggering
beauty must be absorbed and cherished.
What path do writers take to experience this? How do they open the
channels in the brain that might have been content to listen to
Haydn's 19th Symphony in C Major, but blind to nature's offerings?
(this was playing on the radio when I delighted in these visions
today.)
First of all, one must be a "visualist." That isn't a
real word, but it describes what I mean. A person who is stunned
by physical natural beauty (certainly not at the exclusion of aural,
tactile, or emotional stimulate) possesses visual aqueducts to the
world through his or her eyes. Infinitesimal flashes of stunning
images move him beyond belief. These impressions are captured in
his mind's eye, never to be lost, forever to be savored. And often,
when this type of writer is creating, they see the "movie in
their mind," pressing from within, allowing readers to feel
intimate and involved in a scene.
What type of a reader are you? Do you soak up scenes written by
others? Imagine them for days on end? Find choice gems of passages
that affect you for life? Do you want your readers to feel this
way about your own prose?
It is this deeply felt appreciation for nature, for life, for wonder,
that promotes a good writer to potential majesty. Perhaps not to
best-seller status - that illusory fate is in the hands of a publishing
industry often not tuned into art, but focused solely on profit.
Try to ignore that aspect when you are creating your next masterpiece.
In time, if the stars are aligned and you achieve this pinnacle
of greatness, it may happen.
Open your eyes. Reel it in. Absorb the beauty around you, whether
it is the flash of love in an old woman's eye, or the fragile petal
of a tiny orange cinquefoil. Allow yourself to be in that moment,
record it in your soul, and play it back for your readers for the
ultimate connection.
You can do it. Just try. And send me what you've written. I'd love
to see it!
* Wabi Sabi for Writers, by Richard Powell, Adams Media.
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