avatarUlf Wolf

Summary

The author reflects on the ethereal experience of observing seagulls in dense fog, where they appear and disappear into the whiteness, drawing a parallel to a deeper life lesson.

Abstract

On a foggy morning, the author contemplates the usually distant seagulls that are now barely visible, emerging and vanishing into the fog. These winged creatures, often seen as artists of the wind, are now ghostly presences that briefly materialize before fading away, leaving no trace. This transient encounter prompts the author to ponder a life lesson hidden within the ephemeral dance of the gulls and the enveloping fog. The piece ends with an invitation for readers to support the author's creative endeavors through PayPal.

Opinions

  • The author admires the seagulls' mastery of the air currents and their interaction with the environment.
  • There is a sense of wonder at the proximity and the close-up view of the gulls from the bluff, revealing their size and detail.
  • The fog transforms the ordinary sight of seagulls into a poetic and philosophical experience.
  • The author suggests that the fleeting visibility of the gulls in the fog holds a metaphorical significance, hinting at a deeper meaning about existence and perception.
  • The author, known as Wolfstuff, provides a link to their personal website and a PayPal link for readers who appreciate their work and wish to contribute to their creative efforts.

Fog Again

Vanishing Gulls

Image by Author

The seagull through fog Silent, airy, wing — wing steps Fainter, into white

Another foggy morning. Not that the seagulls care. Or perhaps they do.

Usually, though, you’d see them from afar — winged artists of wind and current. Quite often I’d not only see them sail above me, but beside me and even below me, for I’m walking along a bluff about thirty feet above the sandy beach below (and further out the ocean), and the gulls, gliding twenty-five feet about the sand glide five feet below me. It’s a wonderful sight, that, for not only does it give you a close-up of beak and eye, but also a real sense of their size on the wing, a three-feet span I’d guess.

Yes, usually, you’d see the gulls from afar, either shooting up into the air from the beach below, or just riding high on some up-draft or surfing on a strong wind. This morning though, in the dense fog, what gulls I saw appeared out of a milky nowhere and only flashed by or above me for a breath or two, before disappearing back into the fog — this particular one slowly, gradually, growing mistier and mistier, fainter and fainter, until the undisturbed white of the fog was restored, leaving no gull-traces at all.

From nothing: emerging gull, gull, fading back into nothing.

There’s a lesson here somewhere.

© Wolfstuff

P.S. If you like what you’ve read here and would like to contribute to the creative motion, as it were, you can do so via PayPal: here.

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