Tapestry 2022

Page 73

Fish in the Ocean

After the film Soul by Pixar I believe we are already in the ocean - we just need to realize it. If you’ve ever watched the movie Soul (by Pixar), you’ll know the iconic fish story that sax player Dorothea Williams tells the main character, Joe Gardner. But if you haven’t watched the movie- it’s alright. You get an explanation! Joe dreams of “making it” as a jazz pianist, and at the beginning of the movie, he’s offered the chance of his life: to perform as pianist for Dorothea Williams’ renowned quartet. Spoiler alert: he gets to do it… after a chaotic series of events. But after the performance, he tells Dorothea he expected to feel different. Cooler maybe. And then she tells the fish story. Here it is, in all of its infinite wisdom: A young fish swims up to an older fish and says, “I’m trying to find this thing they call ‘the ocean.’” “The ocean?” the older fish says, “That’s what you’re in right now.” “This?” says the young fish. “This is water. What I want is the ocean!” After that, Dorothea gets into a cab and takes off, leaving Joe in the dark city night to sort out his thoughts. Very dramatic. But, what does this all have to do with beliefs? Or what I believe, specifically? Well, I think Dorothea was telling Joe that finally reaching success as a jazz musician wasn’t the glorious ocean he was looking for. The ocean was everything he deemed ordinary in his life: New York pizza, going to the barbershop, even the cacophony of middle school band students that he had to teach. Likewise, I believe that my entire life is the ocean, even more beautiful than whatever my ultimate destination is. Like Joe, we might spend our lives as young fish chasing after that destination we call “the ocean.” Maybe it’s thinking about that next award or internship or college– all to get out of the “water” of high school life. But those goals are just a small gallon of the ocean. The ocean is more than what we’re convinced our journeys should culminate in. It’s too unexplored, too expansive to be limited to one thing. So the ocean might be right here, right now. We can realize that we’re already in the ocean only if we truly live our lives. So enjoy every moment! I believe it’s important to celebrate the now- all the time- like eating lunch with friends or finally clicking “completed” on a MyArchmere assignment. For me, the sense of being in the ocean comes on late, stressful nights. It’s somehow calming to be aware of the present, instead of thinking of the enormous pile of work awaiting me after midnight. Or maybe it’s just procrastination. To quote one of the songs in the movie, “make life your goal.” If you want to see all this for yourself - watch the movie. And when you’re watching it, maybe you’ll start finding the ocean, as I did: feel your eyes fill at Jon Batiste’s piano in the soundtrack, feel your heart leaping at every plot twist, and feel the sadness that pools as a gentle ache when the movie ends and the credits roll because you’ve taken every breath, every step with Joe Gardner. See? You’re already there. In the ocean. This I believe.

Grace Chen ‘24

71


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Strawberry Records, digital photography, Sophia Scarpaci ‘23

0
page 76

The Blue Lobster, Alexander Bogey ‘24

5min
pages 74-75

Fish in the Ocean, Grace Chen ‘24

2min
page 73

Yellow, Alicia Chu ‘24

3min
page 70

Strings, printing ink, Patch Shields ‘23

0
page 71

Instant Gratification, Amelia Gattuso ‘23

0
page 65

The Trail of Ruin We Leave, Haoxue “Mandy” Jiang ‘22

4min
pages 66-67

My Found Blessing, Shripraba Narayanan ‘25

0
page 62

Stop and Smell the Roses, Raphael Coronel ‘23

2min
page 54

The Lore of the Modern Romantic, Jessica Lattanzi ‘23

1min
pages 60-61

I Miss the Stars, Elisa Small ‘25

3min
page 58

Dust Pile Revelation, Ava Passehl ‘22

0
page 57

When It’s Time to Let Go, Kathryn Benson ‘23

0
page 53

Childhood Memoir, Annie Dai ‘22

3min
page 48

Korean Barbecue, scratchboard drawing, Liz Xu ‘24

1min
page 49

Coyote’s Soul, Jacob Poplawski ‘23

1min
pages 50-51

To My Darling Mira:, Sophia Chen ‘24

0
page 46

A Harsh to Heart Conversation, Elena Proctor ‘22

5min
pages 42-43

The Art Traveler, Onyi Kenine ‘22

5min
pages 34-35

A Malediction: Forbidding His Advances, Natalie Gildea ‘23

1min
page 36

Rapunzel, Sophia Chen ‘24

3min
pages 29-30

What You Gave Me, Emma Fannin ‘22

0
page 33

Mahal Kita Parati (I Miss You Always), Bella Dayrit ‘22

2min
page 41

Gaslighting, Amelia Gattuso ‘23

0
page 27

The Clockwork Reprise, Abigail Kortering ‘22

10min
pages 23-25

The Trick of the Ghost, Natalie Gildea ‘23

5min
pages 12-13

Reflections, Sophia Chen ‘24

1min
page 19

I Believe in Goodbyes, Liz Xu ‘24

2min
page 9

Continuation, Amelia Gattuso ‘23

1min
page 14

The Fictional Realm in Which I Dwell, digital art, Ray Bellace ‘22..................................................cover Summer Picnic, Abigail Kortering ‘22

1min
page 6

Absent, Arden Godwin ‘25

0
page 11

My Name, Mehki Solomon ‘22

1min
page 17
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