Raging Sea & A Raft to Drift Upon: Resilience Amid the Storm

White, Dave. Raging Sea. February 14, 2025, Dave White Illustrations.

Dave White’s Raging Sea (February 14, 2025) and Kiana Jimenez’s A Raft to Drift Upon form a powerful meditation on survival, love, and resilience in the face of overwhelming chaos. Together, they tell a story of being caught in life’s storms yet refusing to be consumed by them.

The illustration commands attention with its vast, unrelenting ocean. Waves surge and crash in layers of blue, teal, and white, capturing the rhythm of nature’s fury. Above, the sky is torn open with streaks of lightning, its clouds a roiling canvas of green, black, and gold. In the midst of this tempest, a lone figure clings to a fragile raft—small, vulnerable, yet unwavering. Against the immensity of the sea, the raft is both defiance and hope.

The poem A Raft to Drift Upon becomes the voice of this struggle. It speaks of love, warmth, and hope as shelter amid the storm, the light that persists when despair threatens to drown. Each stanza unfolds as a reminder of the quiet powers that keep us afloat:

Where the illustration shows the force of the external storm, the poem reveals the inner one. The raging sea becomes the metaphor for emotional turmoil, grief, and despair, while the raft embodies resilience—the power of love, memory, and faith that allows one to keep moving forward.

Together, art and poem are not about defeat but endurance. The storm may rage endlessly, but there is always something to hold onto. The raft, fragile yet steadfast, carries us through the crashing waves and reminds us that peace is possible—that light will always break through the clouds.

Turbulent Tides

$20.00

Digital download of the emotive fusion pairing Raging Sea (illustration by Dave White) and A Raft to Drift Upon (poem by Kiana Jimenez).

25 in stock


Discover more from Poetic Bipolar Mind

Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.

  • The Illusion of Freedom

    The Illusion of Freedom

    Dave White’s Willow and Kiana Jimenez’s Binds reveal the paradox of freedom and captivity. The weeping willow’s branches drape like chains, echoing the poem’s lament of unseen binds. Yet both art and verse insist on resilience, reminding us that even in sorrow, a fragile thread of hope persists.

  • The Clockmaker’s Daughter

    The Clockmaker’s Daughter

    When the clockmaker built his daughter, the villagers whispered. Her laughter rang like cracked bells, her eyes ticked with restless dials. Then came the nights of backward clocks, haunted laughter, and screams in the dark. He built her to keep time—or so they thought. But she was made to end it.

  • Beyond Right and Wrong

    Beyond Right and Wrong

    This exploration of ethical theories—spanning subjectivism, utilitarianism, divine command, and beyond—connects philosophy to lived experience. Through history, examples, and reflection, we consider how morality shapes culture, faith, and personal identity. On Poetic Bipolar Mind, ethics becomes more than theory; it becomes a language for art, healing, and human dignity.

error: Content is protected !!