tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-20039900.post114167710224856900..comments2023-04-06T05:50:46.099-05:00Comments on Kathy Oddenino: Reclaiming our Sense of InfinityKathy Oddeninohttp://www.blogger.com/profile/04948970112488410647noreply@blogger.comBlogger1125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-20039900.post-1141700051166811742006-03-06T21:54:00.000-05:002006-03-06T21:54:00.000-05:00Kathy - I love your title for this blog. "A Sense ...Kathy - I love your title for this blog. "A Sense of Infinity" is the working title of a book-of-life I've been writing for years. I understand better and better why our belief that we live only one life keeps up locked up in only certain rooms of our mind; and why memory,or remembering,is an infinite and infinitely sensory experience. Thinking about this made me think about when I first saw the ocean - of course it wasn't only "seeing," yet that is how I usually refer to it. We were very small children when we first went to a beach, in Lagos, Nigeria, and actually I remember the sight, texture, smells of sand, and certain fizzes of ocean water better than the "big water," which came more later. I am remembering why we often associate first with the physical details of sensuous and sensory "meaning."<BR/><BR/>I've just started reading a new novel called, The Brief History of the Dead. On the flyleaf is written, 'Remember me when I'm gone' just took on a whole new meaning." :)M.E.Martinhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/01993165348236952072noreply@blogger.com