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Atticus

(15,124 posts)
Sat Dec 7, 2019, 06:51 PM Dec 2019

Have you ever watched a fire? I don't mean "Have you looked at a fire" or "Have you seen a fire?".

Have you "watched" a fire; looked into it long enough to let the undulating orange flames begin to mesmerize you; free your buttoned-down mind to drift and wander and go to places it has been away from too long?

Now, will be the first to admit that it helps to pull the cork out of a bottle of something smooth and strong to sip as you stare into the glowing ever changing canyons of what used to be mere wood, but it isn't really necessary. The only requirement is that you relax and surrender your conscious mind to serendipity; you let your mind travel down whatever paths present themselves.

I think there is something primeval about a fire that stirs me to appreciate that, as I sit before it, I am warm and dry and really want for nothing. I am safe and with those who care about me. And, I consider how many in this world are not so blessed.

Whether it is the warmth of the fireplace or the rye whiskey, I sleep better after an evening before the fire. And, as the fire dies and my bed beckons, a fragment of a poem read long ago speaks to me again: "And blue bleak embers, ah my dear, fall, gall themselves and gash gold-vermilion".

Hope your evening goes as well as mine is.

32 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
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Have you ever watched a fire? I don't mean "Have you looked at a fire" or "Have you seen a fire?". (Original Post) Atticus Dec 2019 OP
Yes Historic NY Dec 2019 #1
W T F? we can do it Dec 2019 #3
Yes. mnhtnbb Dec 2019 #24
My father once had the idea Beringia Dec 2019 #2
You have to live SonofDonald Dec 2019 #9
This reminded me of 7th grade science class. ariadne0614 Dec 2019 #4
"And blue bleak embers, ah my dear, fall, gall themselves and gash gold-vermilion". Botany Dec 2019 #5
I caught this morning morning's minion, kingdom of daylight's dauphin, elleng Dec 2019 #26
Yeah, it's what we did before TV and the internet ThoughtCriminal Dec 2019 #6
sent by a fireman buddy in Australia Skittles Dec 2019 #7
Sadly.... Pachamama Dec 2019 #28
screw the yellow flames. i watch the blue and red embers. bon fires w/glowing dots flying away. pansypoo53219 Dec 2019 #8
I spent the day watching fire WhiteTara Dec 2019 #10
Blood sausage and apples burrowowl Dec 2019 #14
It's the whiskey!! George II Dec 2019 #11
I read a report by an archaeologist who stated that 1 million years ago there is some evidence abqtommy Dec 2019 #12
Yes Leith Dec 2019 #13
Thank you for the poetry... beautiful. (nt) scarletwoman Dec 2019 #15
Yes Lots DanieRains Dec 2019 #16
Yea. And thank you for bringing Gerard Manley Hopkins... Hekate Dec 2019 #17
You not only appreciate Hopkins but have also actually heard of "sprung rhythms"? More reasons Atticus Dec 2019 #20
Nature's TV nt flying rabbit Dec 2019 #18
Discover: "Why is sitting by a fire so relaxing? Evolution may hold the key." highplainsdem Dec 2019 #19
Yep, my neighbors townhouse right behind mine caught on fire. LisaL Dec 2019 #21
Just turned five I started a "campfire" in the kindergarten sand box. hunter Dec 2019 #22
These days I light the fire every day lunatica Dec 2019 #23
That's the final line of one of my favorites: Gerard Manley Hopkins' exquisite "The Windhover." nt tblue37 Dec 2019 #25
Thank you for this reminder... Pachamama Dec 2019 #27
When I lived in NY I loved to sit in front of a fire in the living room. SeattleVet Dec 2019 #29
Many Times! ProfessorGAC Dec 2019 #30
Yes many, many times. dewsgirl Dec 2019 #31
I love watching fire! parkia00 Dec 2019 #32

Historic NY

(37,449 posts)
1. Yes
Sat Dec 7, 2019, 06:54 PM
Dec 2019

Have you ever watch a house burn, every little crackle, ever little ember, dark thickening smoke, changing colors of red-to- orange-to-blue-to-white. Why yes, I have

mnhtnbb

(31,374 posts)
24. Yes.
Mon Dec 9, 2019, 04:31 AM
Dec 2019

And after I watched our house burn down I could no longer sit in front of a wood burning fireplace and watch a fire even though before I watched our house burn down I used to love watching fires in the fireplace.

Beringia

(4,316 posts)
2. My father once had the idea
Sat Dec 7, 2019, 06:57 PM
Dec 2019

of taking a picture of a fire and focusing on the middle of the fire. He thought it was genius brilliant. He had been smoking pot. I don't think the idea was as inspiring to him the next day when he woke up.

SonofDonald

(2,050 posts)
9. You have to live
Sat Dec 7, 2019, 08:43 PM
Dec 2019

In the moment

I have a fire every night during winter and have been known to inhale.

Pretty

ariadne0614

(1,704 posts)
4. This reminded me of 7th grade science class.
Sat Dec 7, 2019, 07:13 PM
Dec 2019

Our first homework assignment on day one was to watch a candle flame and make a list of everything we noticed about it. I was amazed at how long my list was. That was 58 yers ago, and I never forgot the experience. I think it changed the way my mind worked.

Botany

(70,449 posts)
5. "And blue bleak embers, ah my dear, fall, gall themselves and gash gold-vermilion".
Sat Dec 7, 2019, 07:16 PM
Dec 2019

and yes I have watched fires ... thanx for posting

elleng

(130,757 posts)
26. I caught this morning morning's minion, kingdom of daylight's dauphin,
Mon Dec 9, 2019, 04:56 AM
Dec 2019

dapple-dawn-drawn Falcon, in his riding
Of the rolling level underneath him steady air, and striding
High there, how he rung upon the rein of a wimpling wing
In his ecstasy! then off, off forth on swing,
As a skate's heel sweeps smooth on a bow-bend: the hurl and gliding
Rebuffed the big wind. My heart in hiding
Stirred for a bird, – the achieve of, the mastery of the thing!

ThoughtCriminal

(14,046 posts)
6. Yeah, it's what we did before TV and the internet
Sat Dec 7, 2019, 07:23 PM
Dec 2019

We were experts on fire dynamics.

P.S. re: Campfires:

It is more important to know how to properly put one out, than how to start one.

pansypoo53219

(20,955 posts)
8. screw the yellow flames. i watch the blue and red embers. bon fires w/glowing dots flying away.
Sat Dec 7, 2019, 08:30 PM
Dec 2019

that i painted. as big as a bonfire.

WhiteTara

(29,692 posts)
10. I spent the day watching fire
Sat Dec 7, 2019, 09:10 PM
Dec 2019

It was the most well mannered fire I've ever set and watched all day long. I cooked hot dogs on the coal bed and now I'm going to wash the smoke from my hair and body and go to bed.

burrowowl

(17,632 posts)
14. Blood sausage and apples
Sat Dec 7, 2019, 09:29 PM
Dec 2019

Yum! Yum!
Once cooked a whole sheep on pit embers, takes the better part of the day.

abqtommy

(14,118 posts)
12. I read a report by an archaeologist who stated that 1 million years ago there is some evidence
Sat Dec 7, 2019, 09:16 PM
Dec 2019

of the controlled use of fire by humans and that by 500 thousand years ago the controlled use of fire was universal for humans. That's a long history and the controlled use of fire was the basis of all our technical advances. I'm sure that humans have a built-in genetic appreciation and reverence for fire, just as you've described.

Leith

(7,808 posts)
13. Yes
Sat Dec 7, 2019, 09:18 PM
Dec 2019

It was mesmerizing and very relaxing. I don't remember if any alcohol was involved, but I watched the different shapes of the flames and how they changed completely when a log fell.

Yeah, I get ya. And a gas fire is very unsatisfying.

 

DanieRains

(4,619 posts)
16. Yes Lots
Sat Dec 7, 2019, 09:59 PM
Dec 2019

I go to my place up the Twisp River and do "fire therapy" as I call it all I can. A 200 mile drive.

Life here in Seattle is hectic and maddening.

We all need as much fire therapy as possible.

Hekate

(90,564 posts)
17. Yea. And thank you for bringing Gerard Manley Hopkins...
Sat Dec 7, 2019, 10:00 PM
Dec 2019

...and his sprung rhythms (sprung rhymes?) into it.

Atticus

(15,124 posts)
20. You not only appreciate Hopkins but have also actually heard of "sprung rhythms"? More reasons
Sun Dec 8, 2019, 06:12 PM
Dec 2019

to always read your posts.

Thanks.

highplainsdem

(48,918 posts)
19. Discover: "Why is sitting by a fire so relaxing? Evolution may hold the key."
Sun Dec 8, 2019, 01:59 AM
Dec 2019
https://www.discovermagazine.com/mind/why-is-sitting-by-a-fire-so-relaxing-evolution-may-hold-the-key


And that links to this:

"Hearth and campfire influences on arterial blood pressure: defraying the costs of the social brain through fireside relaxation."

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25387270

hunter

(38,303 posts)
22. Just turned five I started a "campfire" in the kindergarten sand box.
Sun Dec 8, 2019, 10:34 PM
Dec 2019

My mom first caught me playing with matches when I was two.

Found out where my dad hid his propane torch in second grade.

I was born to watch fire.

It's a miracle I didn't burn down our house as a kid.

lunatica

(53,410 posts)
23. These days I light the fire every day
Mon Dec 9, 2019, 01:30 AM
Dec 2019

And when it gets dark I don’t turn any lights on. Don’t need them.

And my cat lies in front of the fire, in turn stretching out or curling into himself like cats do and it’s a joy to watch it all as if it were a play.

My cat teaches me the importance and the luxury of the moments.

SeattleVet

(5,477 posts)
29. When I lived in NY I loved to sit in front of a fire in the living room.
Mon Dec 9, 2019, 05:10 AM
Dec 2019

(Really pissed off the landlord to no end, since there was no fireplace.)

parkia00

(572 posts)
32. I love watching fire!
Mon Dec 9, 2019, 11:34 AM
Dec 2019

It's beautiful, relaxing, every moment it paints and repaints itself like an infinite warm oil painting.

When I was little, I meticulously built a small town of old wooden roof shingles. There were homes with individual rooms and ceilings, barns, huts, and a double story general store. I made "silhouettes" of the town folks from sections of wooden ice cream sticks and placed them around town and inside the buildings. At the edge of the town I constructed a tripod tower made of sticks. On top of that tower, I placed a can filled with gasoline. I started a fire at the base of one of the tripod mast of the tower ensuring that the tower will fall in the direction of the town if the legs were to "give way". In the center of the town square I made another miniature bonfire with some of my townsfolk gathered round for a BBQ. I stepped back and watched intently.

It took longer than I had expected, but eventually the tower started to lean in the predicted angle. In time the inevitable happened as the top heavy tower fell to the forces of physics. The can, with an open top and filled with gasoline ejected it's contents in the town's direction and made a beeline straight to the BBQ gathering of townsfolk like a tidal wave. The ensuring calamity that ensured resembled an orange expanding lily pad of flame which crashed into the town's various structures and burst into flames. There was so much to see at different points of the town. The most memorable image was at one of the house windows. The interior was engulfed and flames was licking out of the windows. One of the townsfolk was standing at the window peering out, perfectly silhouetted against the bright flame as it was enveloped.

I had also put fire crackers in the general store to liven things up. To my surprise, when it finally went off, it blew up the rear section of the store and actually extinguished the fire in and around the building! Resulting in the general store being one of only two structures not completely destroyed by the flames. The other being, surprisingly the two remaining tripods of the tower.

Overall it was an interesting experience. I got into trouble the next day for creating a fairly large burn spot in the back garden. But I figured a small fire was far more interesting to watch than a larger one.

A slow flame as it slowly eats away at a piece of wood is mesmerizing.

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