Catching the Big Fish – David Lynch on meditation, art and creativity

Catching the Big Fish, David Lynch book cover

Catching the Big Fish is such a great book. It consists of small stories about ideas, meditation, creativity, film making and other things in David Lynch’s film making life. The tone is wonderfully light. Condensed advice for the living. It is a massive source for inspirational quotes, and I just thumbed through to get to these.

Sometimes restrictions get the mind going. If you’ve tons and tons of money, you may relax and figure you can throw money at any problem that comes along. You don’t have to think so hard. But if you have limitations, sometimes, you com up with very creative, inexpensive ideas.

Little fish swim on the surface, but the big ones swim down below. If you can expand the container you’re fishing in – your consciousness – you can catch bigger fish.

The Ear in the grass from David Lynch' film Blue Velvet

It would be great if the entire film came all at once. But it comes, for me, in fragments. The first fragment is like the Rosetta stone. It’s the piece of the puzzle that indicates the rest. It’s the hopeful puzzle piece.

In Blue Velvet, it was red lips, green lawn, and the song – Bobby Vinton’s version of “Blue Velvet”. The next thing was an ear lying in a field. And that was it.

Read more on creativity, for example Nathalie Dixon, or Werner Herzog.

David Lynch portrait photo

I can’t finish On Photography by Susan Sontag

I tried reading On Photography by Susan Sontag. The book was recommended to me as a must-read for photographers. I will not doubt it is a classic analysis photography, but my mind seems incapable of absorbing the sentences.

On Photography

The book analyses why people make photographs, what it means, how it relates to other art forms, how people pursue photography. And more, like an article about Diane Arbus’ work.

I find the theoretical analysis quite problematic, being a photographer myself. While taking pictures I do not want to (nor can I) philosophize about the picture-taking itself. I don’t want to know. I want to think as little as possible about the process, but focus on the act, on the picture. Of course I have a frame of reference. But it’s somewhere back in my head, in the unconscious probably.

Susan Sontag portrait
Susan Sontag

I put the book away about halfway through. I feel defeated.

Diane Arbus photographer in action portrait
Diane Arbus
Diane Arbus - Female Impersonators Backstage, 1962
Diane Arbus – Female Impersonators Backstage, 1962

Wandeling door de sneeuw met gescheurde laarzen

In mijn jeugd was sneeuw in de winter niet zo ongewoon. Deze winter nadert een week van sneeuw en vorst, en dat leidt tot nogal hysterische voorzorgsmaatregelen. Treinen en bussen rijden niet meer. Mensen slaan voorraden in. De regering waarschuwt ons met een code rood alarm.

Voor veel andere plaatsen, zoals Scandinavische landen, Rusland, staten in Noord-Amerika en Canada, zou de sneeuw die wij krijgen een babywinter zijn. Als zij op zo’n klein beetje sneeuw zouden reageren als wij, zouden hun plaatsen het grootste deel van het jaar onbewoonbaar zijn.

Ik haalde mijn oude sneeuwlaarzen uit de kast en ging een (foto)wandeling maken. Halverwege de wandeling merkte ik dat mijn laarzen begonnen te lekken. Een beetje onderzoek leerde me dat dat niet zo vreemd was. De rubberen zool van mijn laarzen moet in de loop der jaren in de kast helemaal zijn uitgedroogd. Grote scheuren in de onderkant van de ene laars, een groot gat in de andere.

On how write a good short story by Kurt Vonnegut

Vonnegut:

  • Use the time of a total stranger in such a way that he or she will not feel the time was wasted.
  • Give the reading at least one character he or she can root for. Every character should want something even if it is only a glass of water.
  • Every sentence must do one of two things reveal character or advance the action Start as close to the end as possible.
  • Be a sadist no matter how sweet and innocent your leading characters, make awful things happen to them in order that the reader may see what they are made of.
  • Write to please just one person. If you open a window and make love to the world so to speak your story will get pneumonia.
  • Give your readers as much information as possible as soon as possible. To heck with suspense. Readers should have such complete understanding of what is going on where and why that they could finish the story themselves should cockroaches eat the last few pages.
10 Perfect Kurt Vonnegut Quotes on Creativity & Life