Inspiring ideas are so important that the writer Lisa Dale Norton called them “shimmering images”. She explains:
“A shimmering image is one of those memory pictures you’ve had for years.” It is “a memory that rises in your consciousness like a photograph pulsing with meaning ….You have thousands of these images inside yourself.” They stay with you. You can’t get them out of your mind. “They have energy….these images flitting into consciousness are stories waiting to happen.”[i]Let’s unpack “shimmering images” and their implications for our writing.
Shimmering images can spring from all five senses
While the idea of “images” brings to mind the sense of sight, they’re also driven by the other senses. The aroma of baking bread reminds me of coming home from school with the house filled the delicious fragrance of my mom’s baking that day, and I couldn’t wait to bite into a piece and taste it. I love the feel of the sun’s warmth on my face as I step outside on a warm April morning. I can be absorbed in my thoughts, but when a bird sings, my attention is immediately drawn to the sound of its melody. Yet these experiences are almost always accompanied by sight.
Shimmering moments take us back to the context of our experience
We see our younger selves as we were then, where we were, and the mystery that surrounded us. For example, in a spiritually transformative event in Colombia, I was debating: should I go home to Canada and stay? or should I go home for a break and return to Colombia to engage in wider mission work? I remember where I was in the missionary guest house, sitting on a rocking chair, feeling the overhead fan blow cooling breezes onto me, and hearing the parrot announce, “Tobito! To-BI-to!” as Tobito the cat strolled into his line of vision. I recalled the sacred silence that followed, and knew my place was back in Canada. It was a powerful moment.
Shimmering images can even occur in an unexpected thought
I think of Tolkien. As a professor in Oxford University, he was marking student papers, and out of nowhere popped the thought that went something like this—“In a hole in the ground there lived a hobbit.” He said he had no idea where the idea came from, nor what a hobbit was, nor what he’d do with it. However, the image went on to become a major driving force for writing The Hobbit and The Lord of the Rings.
Shimmering images can arise from all areas of life
Everyday events, from ordinary to breathtaking, become charged with significance. My years growing up in rural Alberta, my hobbies such as reading, gardening, skiing in winter, quilting, and bird watching have all inspired shimmering images.
Farther afield, I lived in Colombia, travelled to other countries, and taught English to immigrants and refugees from 130 countries. Not only have I grown in understanding of many people, their customs, and beliefs, these experiences have given me a wider world view and new shimmering images that energize my writing.
Shimmering images have great emotional impact
It has been said that we remember significant moments because of their emotional impacts. Something startles us, makes us laugh, gives us joy or awe. Or we remember our hurts, a difficult relationship, our rise of anger when we see injustice. All these emotional impacts give shimmering images their power, and according to Norton, are the source of our most potent stories.
Shimmering images can lead to universal themes that touch the hearts of our readers
Our stories can become effective bridges between us and our readers. Readers may not experience the same situations we write about. But larger themes leap off the page and embed themselves into their lives—themes such as hope, forgiveness, healing, growth in our relationship with the Lord, answers to prayer, and more.
And that is why we write. From the heart of shimmering images to the greater themes that touch people’s lives, the Lord asks us to be His co-writers, sharing His greater story. “Go…and tell (others) what great things the Lord has done for you…” Jesus said (Mark 5:19).
In this way we share His love and redemption to a world that so desperately needs Him.
[i] Lisa Dale Norton, (Shimmering Images: A Handy Little Guide to Writing Memoir, New York: St. Martin’s Griffin, 2008), 28-29.
Image by Yuri_B by Pixabay


Sandi, I appreciate your short study on shimmering images as so eloquently presented in Lisa Dale Norton's book. I, too, found it a most helpful resource on learning to, first of all, pay attention to those shimmering images that spring to mind and then getting them into the written form. A most enjoyable post. Thank you.
ReplyDeleteWhat wonderful thoughts to carry forward, Sandi. I love the idea of our mind's shimmering images, and have plenty of them to draw upon. And I appreciate your words "Our stories can become effective bridges between us and our readers," for that is the goal of our writing - that our words may bridge Christ in us to those who read them. Thank you!
ReplyDeleteThe repeated word, shimmering”, packs a lot of energy! I appreciate all the examples you shared from your own experience. I know you more because of them. That’s inspiration right there!
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