Saturday, November 9, 2019
An Analysis of Julia Alvarezââ¬â¢s Poem, ââ¬ÅTouching Bottomââ¬Â Essay
In the poemââ¬â¢s first stanza, Alvarez says, ââ¬Å"Sometimes the best advice comes randomlyâ⬠ââ¬âbut without intent, how can it be advice? Perhaps good advice consists simply of oneââ¬â¢s own ideas, rendered into words by another and recognized by the self as something true. If we go by this definition, then the random pieces of advice are, indeed, good advice. She is thus saying that some of the best ââ¬Å"adviceâ⬠is recognized by the self and in the self, and not merely received from others. Such advice is possibly worth more than any intentional directive, because the meaning of the advice is something that one makes for oneself. Alvarez implies that good advice is abundant, but requires some recognizingââ¬âwhich is what she does. To be able to give good advice, a person must think like the recipient of the advice, and who better to think like the recipient than the recipient herself? Alvarez creates remarkable associations in her mind between randomly heard directives and the troubles of her life; she is actually both the giver and the receiver of the random ââ¬Å"adviceâ⬠, and whoever (or whatever) ââ¬Å"gaveâ⬠her the advice only has an intermediary role. These random pieces of advice are nothing like what we usually conceive advice to be, but are simply reminders of things that she already knew. Thus these random pieces of advice that she recognizes are essentially advice that she gives to herself. In the second stanza, Alvarez talks of the power of these random bits of wisdom. She realizes that ââ¬Å"a minotaur of your own makingâ⬠ââ¬âthat is, self-imposed limitationsââ¬âputs the mind into a certain degree of paralysis, and that randomly received advice, in their simplicity, have the power to awaken an awareness of truisms deeply buried in the subconscious. Alvarez in essence, is talking about the ââ¬Å"shock of recognitionâ⬠that she experiences when she hears these random bits of meaning. It takes these to remind her of her own good ideas that she may have unintentionally discarded into the ââ¬Å"dark labyrinthâ⬠of her mind. Additionally, Alvarez implicitly contrasts her random bits of ââ¬Å"adviceâ⬠with true advice intentionally given by othersââ¬âtoo often, such advice is derived from the experiences of the giver and not the receiver. The poem, because of its focus on ââ¬Å"accidentalâ⬠advice, reminds us of the tendency of people to ignore intentionally given advice, no matter how good, because advice is usually given based on the perceived needs of the recipient; although these needs are often misidentified. This contrasts with her accidental bits of advice, which by their very nature are good and well received. The random advice that Alvarez hears makes her capable ofà ââ¬Å"touching bottom.â⬠Although ââ¬Å"touching bottomâ⬠in general usage has the negative meaning of reaching the lowest point of something (such as when a company goes bankrupt), what she means by having ââ¬Å"touched bottom in my lifeâ⬠is that she realized and recognized the basic and most important aspects of her life. The examples that she gives of these bits of advice, such as ââ¬Å"Please hold through the silenceâ⬠(which she is able to connect to her problem of writerââ¬â¢s block) are of secondary importance, serving only to illustrate and strengthen the poemââ¬â¢s main point, which is that one needs only to look into the self to find wisdom.
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