What do you see?

When I was bored as a young kid, I used to lie in the grass and look up in the sky. I would look at the clouds and the crazy shapes they would make, squinting and imagining an elephant with a long trunk or a duck floating on a lazy river of blue. In reality the images needed lots of creative imagination, but it was a fun way to pass the time. We didn’t have smartphones or tablets. We had to make our own fun.

I haven’t laid down in a bed of grass in a long time. I have supposedly more important things to do with my time now like drawing up project plans for work or cleaning the garage or writing some on my novel. In fact, the list of “adult things” on my To Do List feels like an endless loop. I know that I’ll never catch up on all of them.

When my wife and I went for a walk recently I was reminded of those quieter days of looking up at the clouds. The sky was as blue as blue can be. I felt like if I stared long enough I might get lost in the blue.

In the midst of the blue sky, there were small puffs of cotton candy-thin clouds. They looked so close that I thought I might be able to extend my arms high in the air and pull them down and mold them this way or that into whatever I wanted. I was Michelangelo and the clouds were my David sculpture.

The clouds looked like tiny cotton balls, there weren’t a lot of images. The longer I looked though the more I started to make something of the white puffs. I swore one cloud looked like dancers and a dragon costume in a Chinese New Years Celebration. The cloud swayed this way and that just like dancers in a parade. Another cloud looked like the tippy top of a bad hairpiece. I came close to asking a biker coming fast down the hill, “if someone up ahead had lost their toupee?”

For the most part, the clouds looked just like that, clouds. I wondered if I was in a strange 80s “Coming of Age” movie and had lost my touch, my ability to be a kid again and see something out of nothing. Science actually has a name for the practice. Seeing familiar objects or patterns in otherwise random or unrelated objects or patterns — like clouds, stars, or rock formations — is called pareidol. It’s our brain’s way of recognizing patterns and applying meaning to what it sees.

Take that tech! Our brains have been doing this long before Artificial Intelligence came along!

In the end, I’m not sure what to think. I just know that the temperature was close to being perfect and I was excited to be outside and enjoying myself. (Yes, it was before this latest heat wave or heat dome or whatever the meteorologists are calling it came to town.) I couldn’t completely stop mid-walk and lie on the grass looking up to the sky, like I would have as a young kid, but it was still a great moment.

Oh, yes, the joys of summer weather and being a kid — beauty and joy at its best.


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30 thoughts on “What do you see?

  1. Your post reminds me of the class Peanuts strips when Charlie Brown and friends lied down and watched the clouds. There’s something so whimsical and innocent about these simple moments. More of these please in our very techy world today!

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    1. Kids wanna be older and adults wanna be kids. 🤦‍♂️🤦‍♂️The kids are the smart ones. Ha ha, of course, it’s a hot one today, I don’t blame you for not spending too much time looking up at the clouds. Ha ha⛅️⛅️☀️😎

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    1. I gotta admit at this age — zero gravity recliners sound a little more enticing! If I laid down now in the grass, it’s a hot one here today, so it would be a little icky and I’m not sure I’d be able to get up. Ha ha 🤣🤣🤣🤣⛅️⛅️🌤️😎

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      1. I was thinking the same thing reading your post! Would I be able to get up? Of course laying down on gravel, rocks and cactus isn’t appealing. So it’s zero gravity recliners.

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      2. Oh boy! Living in Palm Springs I’d complain about the heat to people living at the beach. They’d say ‘But it’s a dry heat.” When the temperature is 115 to 126 degrees, it doesn’t matter if it’s dry or humid!

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    1. I had to look that one up when I saw it! You learn something new every day! Of course, I know there’s a name for some of the clouds I saw but I can’t remember their name from the General Ed Science Meteorology class I had freshman year of college. Some help that class was. Ha ha ha! 🤣🤦‍♂️🤦‍♂️😎😎😎

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  2. I haven’t laid down on the grass and looked up at the sky in a l-o-n-g time, but once this heat wave ends and the grass becomes “comfortable” again maybe I’ll give it a go. Nothing wrong with having one’s “head in the clouds” in that circumstance.🙂

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  3. Cloud watching is the best, especially finding different animals in the shapes. Once you do this, the joy of doing it again and again sticks with you forever.

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  4. There is nothing like a long walk on a summer day to expand the imagination and the joy in our hearts especially when it reminds you of our youth. Oh how I miss those lazy days of summer with nothing to do but create our own mischief. Hugs, C

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  5. I remember doing that too when I was a kid. I wonder if that is even ‘a thing’ anymore. Is there too much more to distract children? Are the beautiful puffs of cloud wisps neglected. I’d hope there are children out there, children who look up, and laugh, and lift.

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    1. I still do it Chuckster. I am an artist and it’s probably a personality thing too (daydreamer) I never did quite quite engaged enough in the hum drum of “proper jobs” long enough to stop looking up, but I think it’s something we are trained to stop doing. Stop learning, stop exploring, start work, become a cog!

      Yesterday I cycled through a field near my house with my family and I had to stop several times just to take it in – it was so breathtaking. We are lucky to have the perfect temp at the moment (having had hardly any warm sun all year) and it really helps when things feel comfortable and the sun is warm on your skin!

      I loved your post Brian, we probably all need more time with our imaginations and to cloud gaze. We talk to our kids about cloud shapes as if it’s as important as learning your times tables and I hope they will never stop looking up too.

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      1. It is heartwarming to think about adults stopping to admire nature’s bounty. I need to make that a priority too! 🌹

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