Still, Alive

We stand, looking up. The glass display is motionless, but it feels alive with whispers of hidden stories and memories. Like mine.

I’m a child, standing on the jungle’s edge in ankle-deep Amazon river water. The vicious sun bites our shoulders, and our feet seek refuge in the wet sand as schools of minnows swarm about. Into the water, we lower emptied florescent tube lightbulbs with farofa—yellow-brown like the Chihuly—collected in the unbroken end as bait. Soon the bulbs teem with the tiny fish. Dinner…

“Thoughts?”

“Extraordinary.” I muse. “It speaks a language I haven’t heard in ages.”


As always, many thanks for Rochelle Wisoff-Fields for hosting Friday Fictioneers! Stop over and read a wonderful array of 100-word-fiction pieces based on this photo prompt!

26 thoughts on “Still, Alive

  1. That is such a blessed story that it brought tears of memory to my eyes as well. I remember “noodling” (fishing by hand without nets or poles) when I was a young girl to get food to eat. Usually, it was carb, but occasionally, I snagged a trout. Once, I got ahold of a catfish… That one tore my hands to bits… but he was soo good. These days, I can’t even stand the smell of fish without getting sick to my stomach. I tried to eat a bite of really nicely made salmon a few months ago, but couldn’t even get it past my tongue. Guess I’m just all fished out for this lifetime.

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    1. Thank you so much for sharing, Bon Lee. Wow. I feel so honored to have connected with you over this story. Your words right here sound like a memoir in the making; I’ve been thinking about them these past couple days. My memory is based in reality, but I was fortunate enough that the fish wasn’t our only food. Again, thank you for sharing about your life <3.

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