Perspective. Nothing opens the aperture of life better than time away from your daily routine. Vacations are an intermission between acts, providing time to stretch your legs, consider what you’ve seen and prepare for what’s to come.
This past week in saltwater provided that intermission and granted me perspective at just the right time.
When every hour is consumed with duty, your field of view narrows because there’s no time to see what’s around. Goal-driven days, weeks and months, without pause, force you into a constricted focus, a tapered view, until you cannot grasp what is beyond the periphery of those goals. You might see most of it, but you can’t experience it, because there’s simply no time to spare. You don’t have the energy or the space to grab hold of what surrounds you and give it a good look. So half of life passes by on the edges, until you know what you’re missing but can’t take your foot off the gas long enough to meet it outside of your own lane.
This Troutbitten website has served as a journal for me at times and as a fishing log at others. In truth, much of it has been intertwined.
I found fishing early on, and it seems that all my life I’ve gone fishing to recapture the spirit of living, to be reminded of what I’m missing, to breathe deep, tune in and walk away from everything for a while. Fishing has been my way to broaden that field of vision again — that breadth of experience. To open up to everything around me while pursuing a single fish in a narrow lane.
It’s enlightening to look back through the stories I’ve written here on family and fishing. So much has changed in my life, in this business, with my boys and in the ways that I fish. And it’s good to reflect a bit, to be thankful for the progress and proud of the achievements. Because “life moves pretty fast, and if you don’t stop to look around once in a while, you could miss it.” — Ferris Bueller.
When Troutbitten became my career, the simple act of fishing grew more complicated. It tied itself to work, until the stories and words, the photos, videos and audio files were stirred into the same pot as invoices and emails.
These saltwater trips — family vacations with a healthy dose of fishing the surf and stalking fluke with bucktails and spinning rods — have energized my pure delight of fishing. Six years ago, I knew nothing. But after these daily dawn and dusk shifts beside an eastern ocean — and a few under the headlamp — I understand enough to trust myself. I’ve reached the point where I know when I’ve fished it well and I can move on. I’ve assimilated the sources, put tactics to the test and have emerged with a guiding light down my own path.
I love the long game — always have. And for right now, in this brief bit of time, I know what I’m working on — in life, in saltwater and in the Pennsylvania woods.
Fish hard, friends.
READ: Troutbitten | A Fish Out of Freshwater
READ: Troutbitten | Surf and Salt — LBI 2019
READ: Troutbitten | Lessons From the Salt — Strike Zone, Sensitivity and Persistence
** NOTE ** If you are an LBI regular or a NJ surf fisher, please get in touch. The salt is a mystery to me, and I’ll take all the guidance I can get.
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Enjoy the day.
Domenick Swentosky
T R O U T B I T T E N
domenick@troutbitten.com
Another great article. It’s good to step away sometimes so you can see things clearer. Well done. LBI is a wonderful place. Glad u enjoyed. See you in October. Looking forward to it. Stay well.
Right on
Hey Dom, Glad you were able to make it to the beach this year! How was the fishing? Did the boys have any encounters with big toothy critters?
Hi John. The fishing was excellent. Thank you.
Love it. Hope you and the family enjoyed a restful and recuperative vacation.
Thanks, my friend.
Turning your passion into a career can be difficult if you lose perspective of why you love it.
It can be easy to focus only on the business and end up losing your passion and turning it into a job. Stoked you have not lost your passion.
Great stuff
Good for you, Dom! Having grown up fishing for trout in PA streams (a bit east of you), my relocation to Southern California after retiring from the Air Force posed a problem — my favorite fishing is too far away to do consistently. (Yes, that seems to be a mental barrier, but it does have a financial facet too.) However, there’s a BIG body of water close by, so I ventured into the salt. Turns out corbina are in this area and like to devour sand crabs like bonefish. While I don’t have the thousands of hours available to learn the salt like it took for trout in the streams, I hired a guide. I’m certainly not as accomplished with the fly rod in salt as I am in freshwater, but it is a good challenge and opened up my aperture, which was limited in both fishing and life as you so eloquently point out.
As others said, it’s great your job hasn’t diminished your passion. I certainly enjoy hearing from you and the Troutbitten crew; it makes the SoCal traffic more bearable (as I imagine I’m in a stream or contemplating a new approach when I get back into one). Thank you!
This third paragraph is simply beautiful and reminds me I don’t just read Troutbitten to become a better fisherman but also for the power in your prose. Many thanks, Dom