ElectricBlue
Joined 11 Years Ago
- Joined
- May 10, 2014
- Posts
- 18,315
Thanks, that's a fascinating clarification - that you reenact the movement or the action in your mind. Knowing that, it's a subtlety that will no doubt park itself in my memory, and become useful.This is the second time I've gotten up from the couch where I'm trying to launch my Sunday nap.
Back to somaticism. In the example about the homework, the reason the trifling inaccuracy stops me, is that I'm mentally handing the paper to the teacher and experiencing the disconnect when they say something about it, having not yet seen it. So it's not intellectualism. It's somaticism.
Several readers have said that my writing makes scenes tangible, vivid in their minds. I've asked, can you explain how the words are working? but they can't. Perhaps it's this, the way I focus on something that might seem inconsequential or not seen by others, and catch it.
I shall make you up a collection of freckles! This is the scene you were looking for:
I saw how the back of her hand was lightly freckled, the veins like a river on a map, and ever so slightly blue. Her skin was quite pale. A long scar ran along the side of her little finger, and I imagined some childhood accident, a young girl running inside to find mother, when only a father would do. I saw a tiny pulse on a vein near her wrist, and counted her heartbeats. Her pulse was quite quick, and I lost count at twenty-two.