Today’s prompt is inspired from Poetic Medicine by John Fox, “The Healing Power of Images.”
“A morning glory at my window satisfies me more than the metaphysics of books” — Walt Whitman
“Images are drawn from sensory experience and help us to feel what the writer or speaker is communicating. Whitman is more satisfied by the morning glory because it is real and alive, it communicates something to him about reality that is particular, clean and unmistakable. Images offer us direct experience. They can show themselves to us through any of the senses.”
Think about the house you grew up in, or where you spent most of your childhood. Or, if you want to write from your fictional character’s point of view. . . picture a place where the protagonist spends a lot of time.
Now, think about routes you routinely took . . . to school. . . or the library. . . a store . . . or playground
Travel back in time, or to your imaginary place, and see the sights and scenery. If you are working on fiction. . . use this prompt to visualize your story’s setting.
Zoom out like an owl and observe the activity below. Perch on a rooftop or a pole or a high wire.
Let’s have the owl observe something on your daily route, or your character’s. A place that evokes a strong memory for you.
Take a moment and picture this place. . . an intersection, in front of a store, a front yard, a back yard, an untamed place or a place filled with human or animal activity . . . a familiar place, either from real life, or make it real with your imagination.
Zoom down, get closer to the action. Perch where you can clearly see details of the place you have selected.
Prompt: Describe as precisely as you can, the images and direct sensations you see, hear, feel, intuit, smell.
Use sensory detail: Smell, sound, taste, touch, visual: a vendor’s food cart, sewer sour milk smell, wind chimes, brakes screeching, popcorn, hot dogs, brittle wood on telephone pole, dirt, yard ornament, cigarette butts.